Justin U Akpachiogu CEng MSaRS
Becoming registered quantifies your professional development. It creates opportunities, identifies the individual as adding value to their employer, and demonstrates competence to the wider industry.
Becoming registered quantifies your professional development. It creates opportunities, identifies the individual as adding value to their employer, and demonstrates competence to the wider industry.
It validates that I possess the skills and knowledge required to hold the title. Registration opens a wide range of opportunities and doors that every professional engineer should aspire to acquire.
As a standard for professional recognition and offering a framework for continual personal and professional development, professional registration with the Engineering Council really is peerless.
Becoming professionally registered with the highly reputed and renowned Engineering Council provides me with opportunities to connect with influential and inspirational people.
The Engineering Council has signed a landmark Mutual Recognition Agreement (MRA) with the USA’s National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying (NCEES).
Being professionally registered demonstrates your commitment to continued development and learning within your chosen career, whilst also showing your willingness to develop and enhance your own personal development.
Google DeepMind's pioneering AI weather forecasting technology, GraphCast, has been awarded the 2024 MacRobert Award, the UK's most prestigious engineering innovation prize.
Professional recognition is mainly about self-satisfaction and demonstrating required competence, commitment, and continuous professional development (CPD).
Being a CEng has opened many other career options for me and provided assurance to future employers that I meet a common standard, while helping raise quality across the entire industry.
The feeling of becoming professionally qualified is worth it, if only for the personal satisfaction of your professional growth and the confidence to progress beyond.
BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT, has stated that the upcoming UK General Election is the first where the government will need a vision for how computing will transform the lives of everyone in the UK, as well as the economy.
Professional registration shows my commitment to the industry and my interest in mentoring the next generation, fostering a positive industry attitude towards technicians.