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Home›Work›Job Search›The Ins and Outs of Embarking on a Career in 3D Printing

The Ins and Outs of Embarking on a Career in 3D Printing

By Maria Bashi
Feb 8, 2019
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3d printer printing

If you want to forge a career in an industry that is well and truly burgeoning, then you should consider stepping into 3D printing. This is a field that, despite its youth, is making a massive impact in a number of different industries — it is used in everything from engineering to mining, and it doesn’t look like it is going to slow down any time soon.

Embarking on a career in 3D printing isn’t necessarily straight forward, though. To find the ins and outs of taking such a venture, make sure to read on.

You have to work on a few important skills

As well as quality designing abilities, you also need to be able to showcase mathematical prowess if you want to find success as a 3D printer. You need to be quick and precise with all the sums that you add up to ensure that you don’t ever over compensate when it comes to adding pixels and over forms of visual stimuli to your designs.

In order to work on the exact skills you need to be a 3D printer, you should consider studying the field. You can take the following courses at undergraduate level and receive an education in 3D printing:

  • Engineering
  • Animation
  • Design
  • Biomedical Technology
  • Computer Science

You have to become accustomed to the tools that are used

If you don’t quickly become accustomed to 3D printing tools, then you’ll soon find yourself falling behind in the race for employment. Quite simply, you must have a working knowledge on most of the tools that are used in the industry, as well as a thorough understanding of a select few of them.

One type of tool that you need to understand inside and out is a PCB design tool. You need to know how they are used to design 3D printed circuits at their inception, and you need to know how certain qualities of these tools can be used to manipulate the outcome of 3D products. In this instance, it is advisable to invest in your own toolkit — CircuitStudio offer a reasonably priced PCB design tool that you can use, once you are used to it, to create intelligently optimized engineering products.

You have to hone in your niche

You need something that pulls you to the forefront of employers plans, and you need something to make you stand out — without a niche, quite simply, you will fall into the background in the 3D printing industry and you will make getting a job an incredibly difficult task. Whether your niche is that you only work with certain materials, whether it’s that you only work with a certain type of printer, or whether it’s that you only design certain products, you need to hone in on it.

To embark on a long and successful career in 3D printing, you must take the above advice. You must work on a number of skills, get used to a host of different tools, and you must hone in on your niche.

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