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Careers 2001: Global Trends Special Supplement

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Aerospace’s Campus Recruitment Activities
Different Paths to an Aviation Career
Engineers Need Life Skills Too
Colleges Attract Students with Research Opportunities, Focused Curriculum
JSF Promises to Boost Employment
Is the 21st Century Workforce Diverse?
2001 Schools List

JSF Employment Could Peak at More Than 6,000

While two teams await word about the award of the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) contract, leaders at the competing companies have a common concern: how to add new staff effectively should their company win the contract.

Tom Burbage, executive vice president/general manager for Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co.’s JSF team, said, "It is the kind of challenge you like to have. It is a chance to revitalize your workforce, to open up new opportunities and attract all-new talent."

However, just as important as marketing the employment opportunities is the manner in which people join the team. Burbage calls this the "on-boarding process," a critical opportunity to set the personality and tempo of the team. The Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co. approach is to offer a four-week training process to bring on new team members, followed by more-specific, two-week training periods.

Timing is everything, according to Burbage. "You cannot afford to staff at a high rate until the contract is awarded." For now, each of the prime development teams has approximately 500 employees--people who have shifted from other programs or joined the company to fill entirely new positions. With the culmination of flight demonstrations, some employees have moved on to new assignments.

Winning the Joint Strike Fighter contract, which is scheduled to be awarded by year-end, would boost employment substantially at Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co.
Once the contract is awarded, however, integrated product team leaders will move into place, and more than 60 new employees will sign on every week for the next year. Peak hiring for the primes will involve adding about 4,500 workers, with team partners bringing on an additional 1,000-2,000 employees each.

Peter Shaw, leader of the Northrop Grumman Air Combat Systems portion of the Lockheed Martin JSF team, said a contract win would allow his team of 60 to swell to as many as 1,500. Some of the hiring will be to "backfill" positions vacated by experienced employees transferred to the JSF project.

Northrop Grumman learned the value of retraining individuals two years ago when it applied the practice to its production employees. Shaw said retraining would be provided to engineers, varying by discipline and tailored to JSF’s new tools and processes.

Burbage said Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co. has set a goal of getting 40% of its new hires from college and university campuses.

Today’s graduates "are trained a lot differently than we were," Burbage pointed out. "They are much more general practitioners instead of specialists. Our operations were set up in the past so that you were assigned to be, say, a stress engineer. You worked in that little box. Because today’s graduates have much broader computer skills, they have the capability to do a variety of tasks that in the past might have involved two to three people."

The JSF program also presents an opportunity to implement new business methods. Burbage said in the case of Lockheed Martin, it would initially involve more responsibility for systems engineers. Once the aircraft’s systems and requirements are fully defined, specialty engineering disciplines will be applied. In addition, he believes much more "virtual" work will be involved--individual contributors linked via satellite to locations.

"Aerospace used to be a very nomadic industry, with people following new opportunities," Burbage said. "People do not like to move anymore. We are fortunate to have the tools needed for people to work from remote sites. I foresee a roomful of people sitting in Marietta [Ga.], each working on different integrated product teams here in Fort Worth.

"We have a poster that says JSF is another legend in the making--it is an opportunity to work on a really exciting, very advanced technology airplane. It is a unique situation, no matter which team wins," Burbage concluded.

Is the 21st Century Workforce Diverse? >>

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