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Consulting Engineers (CEs) at networking vendors blend deep technical expertise with customer-facing skills to bridge the gap between account managers and specialized solution design. They operate as specialists who support Sales Engineers when customer requirements demand deeper technical knowledge.
• CEs often join from traditional network engineering backgrounds or increasingly through vendor graduate programs
• The role provides higher impact by influencing entire industries rather than just one company
• CE positions typically offer better compensation than operational networking roles
• Computer science education rarely covers networking fundamentals, creating an industry knowledge gap
• The autonomy of the CE role allows for continuous learning and specialization while maintaining customer contact
• Working at a vendor provides exposure to bleeding-edge technology and broader industry perspectives
• Soft skills are equally important as technical skills for success in consulting engineering
If you're interested in transitioning to a Consulting Engineer role, develop your soft skills and build relationships in the networking community, as these connections are invaluable. Reach Colin Doyle and Jared Cordova on LinkedIn to learn more about consulting engineering opportunities.
This episode has been sponsored by Meter.
Go to meter.com/aone to book a demo now!
You can support the show at https://www.buzzsprout.com/2127872/support or from the "Support The Show" link at https://linktr.ee/artofneteng.
Thanks for listening and for your continued support :)
Support the show
Find everything AONE right here: https://linktr.ee/artofneteng
By Andy and Friends4.7
8383 ratings
Send us a text
Consulting Engineers (CEs) at networking vendors blend deep technical expertise with customer-facing skills to bridge the gap between account managers and specialized solution design. They operate as specialists who support Sales Engineers when customer requirements demand deeper technical knowledge.
• CEs often join from traditional network engineering backgrounds or increasingly through vendor graduate programs
• The role provides higher impact by influencing entire industries rather than just one company
• CE positions typically offer better compensation than operational networking roles
• Computer science education rarely covers networking fundamentals, creating an industry knowledge gap
• The autonomy of the CE role allows for continuous learning and specialization while maintaining customer contact
• Working at a vendor provides exposure to bleeding-edge technology and broader industry perspectives
• Soft skills are equally important as technical skills for success in consulting engineering
If you're interested in transitioning to a Consulting Engineer role, develop your soft skills and build relationships in the networking community, as these connections are invaluable. Reach Colin Doyle and Jared Cordova on LinkedIn to learn more about consulting engineering opportunities.
This episode has been sponsored by Meter.
Go to meter.com/aone to book a demo now!
You can support the show at https://www.buzzsprout.com/2127872/support or from the "Support The Show" link at https://linktr.ee/artofneteng.
Thanks for listening and for your continued support :)
Support the show
Find everything AONE right here: https://linktr.ee/artofneteng

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