Thanks Lloyd and Dieter for the input,piping is my expertise also towers, drums, vessels,exchangers, fin fans,boilers,just about anything to do with refineries.I have one year "official experence" as a mechanical planner plus 10 years behind the scenes planning .Any recruiters reading this get in touch Thanks, yall.
Member for
16 years 11 months
Member for16 years11 months
Submitted by Richard Young on Wed, 2009-01-14 13:16
Thanks Lloyd and Dieter for the input,piping is my expertise also towers, drums, vessels,exchangers, fin fans,boilers,just about anything to do with refineries.I have one year "official experence" as a mechanical planner plus 10 years behind the scenes planning .Any recruiters reading this get in touch Thanks, yall.
Member for
18 years 9 months
Member for18 years10 months
Submitted by Dieter Wambach on Wed, 2009-01-14 04:42
You could always become an assistant Planner, although the money is not as good it will be a good start and then you can gain experiance. There is all types of planners the best ones are those who get off their Bums and go out to site to review progress and get their hands dirty. With your hands on experiance planning should come second nature as we all do it without thinking.
Regards
Lloyd
Member for
16 years 11 months
Member for16 years11 months
Submitted by Richard Young on Sun, 2009-01-11 20:28
for Primavera P3 Planner/Scheduler plus 26 years in the Petro/Chem industry does this make me as bankable as an engineer? The only reason I ask is that the econimic developements in my country (The good old U.S.A.)Got me a lay off 3 months ago and I cant seem to even buy a job as a Planner/Scheduler so Ive fallen back on my Pipe Fitting Skills to pay the bills for now. Im not trying to complain Im glad to have something to fall back on, however I do like the perks of the office..
Member for
17 years 3 months
Member for17 years3 months
Submitted by Samer Zawaydeh on Sun, 2009-01-11 15:42
You need an Engineering Degree to be called an Engineer.
In order to be called a planner you need to do the tasks and duties of the Planner. Which are mainly to segregate the content of the Contractual Documents into a Time Schedule meeting the scope and time.
With time and experience, planners tend to get certified by International Institutions.
Member for
16 years 11 monthsRE: Planner/scheduler
Thanks Lloyd and Dieter for the input,piping is my expertise also towers, drums, vessels,exchangers, fin fans,boilers,just about anything to do with refineries.I have one year "official experence" as a mechanical planner plus 10 years behind the scenes planning .Any recruiters reading this get in touch Thanks, yall.
Member for
16 years 11 monthsRE: Planner/scheduler
Thanks Lloyd and Dieter for the input,piping is my expertise also towers, drums, vessels,exchangers, fin fans,boilers,just about anything to do with refineries.I have one year "official experence" as a mechanical planner plus 10 years behind the scenes planning .Any recruiters reading this get in touch Thanks, yall.
Member for
18 years 9 monthsRE: Planner/scheduler
Richard
How is your experience as a planner - years, area? Where do you want to work - country, area? Which languages?
No need to be an engineer. This would make a start easier but isnt essential. I understood your information as if you worked as a planner already.
In this forum you can find some recruiters. Just send a private message to them with your wishes and what you can offer.
Good luck!
Dieter
Member for
21 years 9 monthsRE: Planner/scheduler
Richard,
You could always become an assistant Planner, although the money is not as good it will be a good start and then you can gain experiance. There is all types of planners the best ones are those who get off their Bums and go out to site to review progress and get their hands dirty. With your hands on experiance planning should come second nature as we all do it without thinking.
Regards
Lloyd
Member for
16 years 11 monthsRE: Planner/scheduler
Thanks Sammer,I do have a certification
for Primavera P3 Planner/Scheduler plus 26 years in the Petro/Chem industry does this make me as bankable as an engineer? The only reason I ask is that the econimic developements in my country (The good old U.S.A.)Got me a lay off 3 months ago and I cant seem to even buy a job as a Planner/Scheduler so Ive fallen back on my Pipe Fitting Skills to pay the bills for now. Im not trying to complain Im glad to have something to fall back on, however I do like the perks of the office..
Member for
17 years 3 monthsRE: Planner/scheduler
Dear Richard,
You need an Engineering Degree to be called an Engineer.
In order to be called a planner you need to do the tasks and duties of the Planner. Which are mainly to segregate the content of the Contractual Documents into a Time Schedule meeting the scope and time.
With time and experience, planners tend to get certified by International Institutions.
Hope this is clear.
Samer