Robert Szczesniak
I currently work for UOP as a Chief Technical Advisor. This includes traveling globally to customer sites to lead teams responsible for start-up, turnaround, or revamp project involving UOP technologies. My experience is primarily in Aromatics with exposure to all aspects of refining. Prior to UOP I worked as an environmental consultant gaining extensive experience in project management, report writing, regulation, data analysis, and field work.

I'd like to try it all, thank you!
It started with not knowing what I wanted to do. It is hard to pick one thing; I wanted to try it all. Looking at college applications as a dumbstruck high school student, I liked chemistry and math. I was asked, what do you want to major in? I thought, "Both? Can you even do that?"
Learning to look ahead
It wasn't very clear to me what I wanted and where I'd find it, so I went through the motions of finding a job and eventually did. Over the next several years, I had couple of jobs. While the first wasn't very satisfying, the second was a better fit, but it still wasn't quite right either. It was at this point I was able to see the value in the experiences I had and see things from a new perspective.
Is the grass really greener?
Then comes the hard part - is the grass really greener? Make sure you do your research. I had a short list of places I was willing to take the risk for. Fortunately, one of them accepted. This was a jump from a small firm to a very large one, trading one set of options and restrictions for another. For me, preparing for the move was less work than getting in the job and making it work. To start with, I made the fairly rare decision to make a lateral move. But it paid off, because after learning the basics and how the company functioned, I was able to move into a position that I think I have been looking for since college. Ironically, I was actually offered a chance at a very similar position during my first job search out of school; I just didn't know I was looking for it yet.What I've learned about building a career

What "Now I get it!" insights about work or school can you share?
Comments
I really liked this piece. It gives insight to people that are wondering if they will still be sitting and making P&IDs at firms like Fluor and Bechtel for the next 30 years.
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Thanks, glad you liked the post. I hope that people make career choices instead of following the path of least resistance.
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I graduated college and found a job within 6 months. I was laid off a month later. I'm still applying to careers in my field, but I find there's a sense of peace that comes with taking the time to collect off-the-wall careers. I worked in a candy shop for a week and learned how to make bourbon balls! I'm currently trying to convince a local coffee shop to hire me so I can learn to make better espresso.
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That sounds like an excellent use of the opportunity. And handy skills for keeping your spirits up. When I was laid off I took a bike ride from Chicago to Iowa and back. It was a great week.
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I am a chemical engineering undergrad from Chicago as well, and your piece on your life as a traveling chemical engineer was incredibly inspiring to me, as I've moved around a lot internationally as a kid, and travel is something I'd love to have in my job. It's a position I'd like to work towards, so if you don't mind sharing, what was the very similar position that you were offered on your first job search out of school?
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I would love to help...but in the last few years our HR has become completely automated. Other than saying go to the website and sending in your resume (I know this feel like sending it into a black hole) I don't really have much. But my recommendation for Plan B is that you look in other places. There are some other large companies that have similar positions - the easiest might be looking for a company that has foreign postings. This would be something where you move to a location for a couple of years - this doesn't have the quantity of travel, but I am sure there would be quality and you can always find something "in the region" to travel to (for example it is a lot easier to travel around Asia when the first step isn't crossing the Pacific). Also hit your other sources (school contacts, local AiChe meetings, other networking events) start talking to people, ask what they do and what their companies do. There are some smaller companies that have positions that require travel.
The similar position was in the same group and it was just an offer to interview. But they described the interview as being intense and the position....well i didn't have the confidence or motivation. I didn't have a clear idea of what I wanted at the time and a longer term commitment to a hard working role didn't sound like a good "learning" opportunity. I don't know if I had done it then if I would have been better off or worse. I would have been able to do it longer, but i don't know if I would have embraced the way I have...sometimes the grass is greener and sometimes it is just an illusion.
I would be interested in your take on international travel as a kid since we have a 3.5yr old that we are currently dragging around. We hope he enjoys it.
P.S. (not a comment to anyone specific) I occasionally get this question asked to me through other digital avenues. I am willing to answer any questions, but a recommendation to anyone looking to connect by social media (LinkedIn, fb, G+, etc.) I am open to connection requests but (and I am assuming this is true for many people) it would be helpful to edit the generic template. When I get a LinkedIn request, if I can not figure out how we are connected from your public profile I am hesitant to accept.
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Thank you for your response, it does make sense that the first step across the Pacific would require the most work to make happen. I'll definitely keep my eyes open for opportunities and follow up on your advice (i.e. website, foreign job postings, networking events, school contacts).
As for my take on international travel as a kid, I think what I gained the most out of my international travel was the ability to assimilate and take command of a new environment by finding similarities to my old one. While my dad didn't move as often as you seem to do (as a management consultant, his assignments would last for a school year, but perhaps it was something he requested), I was very often the new kid in school, and I learned how to make friends in new environments through common ground. It sounds fundamental, but it was a bigger deal back then because I was very shy.
If there was a way for me to go back in time and tell my younger self a single piece of advice though, it would be without a doubt to tell myself to have the courage to stay in contact with my friends in different countries. This is obviously something much easier nowadays with social media websites, but my main method of correspondence back then was writing letters, and the more time that passed the more I got discouraged and I fell out of touch with a lot of friends.
And I think I see what you're saying about the best path not always being a straight line from A to B. There was a time when my dad was contemplating taking an assignment in Shanghai, and while I would have attended an international school where English would be spoken, I was very adamantly against moving to China at all. I am Chinese, but my first language was English, and my Mandarin isn't nearly as up to par, and I was afraid of being embarrassed. The move didn't happen, but my dad used to (jokingly?) threaten me with sending me off to China by myself for a summer to force my Mandarin to improve, which is ironic, because now I've done a complete 180 and am looking for ways to study abroad in China. I'm not sure if the attitude change would have happened earlier or later if the move to Shanghai had happened or if I hadn't had international travel experience. I've pretty much accepted that there are, and will always be, a lot of things that I know zilch about, but I think I've grown past the embarrassment to always ask questions and to always try. Usually when I throw myself whole-heartedly into learning something I don't know, I find people who are happy to help.
This became a way longer response than I expected to your question about a kid's view of international travel, but I hope some of it was interesting.
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Thanks for the reply, I am always on the look out for some first hand experience. It seems that everyone reacts differently to being "thrown into the deep-end". Sometimes I think the only thing we (as parents) can do is encourage trying new things but it is hard to force something when it is not ready. I can imagine that being that transitional generation (I'm not but my dad is) can be difficult and confusing. It took us nearly 50 years to get him out and back to the "old country" and now he goes regularly without prompting. For me it was moving out for college.
He was/is worried about his language skills to. I know I work with a ton of people all across Asia that have tremendous English but won't speak any because they are afraid of messing up. Practice works wonders...and quickly. I am terrible with all languages (remembering grammar and pronunciations - especially Mandarin) but I advanced more in a weekend in Paris than 3 years of French class. And after a year in China I can count.
I can't guarantee any kind of length or location for my assignments, so we'll be hanging it up once it gets to school-time. Future traveling will have to be done on a strictly amateur basis.
Thanks again - and good luck in your journey. I hope to see you out on the road there someday.
P.S. I did remember one other idea. You might be able to look up UOP or Honeywell (or other company you find interesting) at local campus recruiting events or Career Fairs. Even if you don't go to that school, if you can get to the event you could meet a real person and that might help your chances.
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I agree with everything you say about language skills. Last year, I wrote a study abroad program about granting me a possible exception to their language prerequisites as I was a "heritage speaker" (a.k.a. had gone to weekend Chinese school for 9+ years), and they sent me a placement test to gauge my abilities. I glanced at it and could barely read anything. I didn't bother filling out the test, since I didn't think I would pass.
A week or so later, I took my university's Mandarin placement test as I was determined to better my language skills in order to study abroad. There was an extremely simple writing portion and a twenty minute interview conducted in Mandarin. As I took it, more and more of my Mandarin came back to me, and my conversational skills during the interview impressed the professor enough to tentatively place me two levels higher than I had expected. Encouraged, I went back to the study abroad placement exam and found the reading portion much, much easier. I guess moral of the story: exposure is everything.
I just realized all the advice I gave was a for a kid internationally traveling while in school. I guess being in school for 13+ years makes you forget that there is a time before you started school, haha. Take lots of pictures, so that he can look back on them later if he forgets. They're experiences worth preserving.
That is an interesting idea. The only thing I might second-guess is that schools tend check for school IDs to make sure you're a registered student at their school when you go to career fairs/recruiting events. Meeting real people would probably be a definite plus though, I'll keep my eyes out for any opportunities. I remember years ago, a guy at my aikido dojo was telling me that he worked with a lot of chemical engineers at a place called Honeywell when I told him I wanted to major in chemical engineering. I'll just hopefully keep meeting more and more people and foster genuine friendships.
Thanks again for all your responses.
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Yeah, they might check IDs. I haven't been to one in a while and I am sure each has slightly different policies. I guess you'll have to call ahead or something. This was a suggestion given to my by our hiring managers one time when I was looking for ways that applicants could get in touch with them. I am sure that the company would appreciate the extra traffic to their booth, but the school might have an issue.
We have a running joke that we need to take those pictures of him eating in street markets and other random places to put into a "when your parents were cool" book to show him when he complains we don't let him do anything fun.
One last "exposure" comment - we were trying to get him to interact with the locals (hotel staff and colleagues) to help foster some language skills...then he start telling people that they should speak English to him. Not exactly the response we were hoping for, but we'll keep trying. Last month (after being out of China for 4-5 months) he randomly counted to ten in Mandarin. Guess some of it sunk in a little.
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