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Climbing the Technical Ladder at Sandia National Laboratories

Cynthia A. Phillips shares her insights on climbing the technical ladder at Sandia National Laboratories, discussing topics such as mentorship, impact, visibility, and other key attributes for success.

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Climbing the Technical Ladder at Sandia National Laboratories

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  1. Climbing the Technical Ladder at Sandia National Laboratories Cynthia A. Phillips Discrete Algorithms and Complex Systems Dept. CRA-W Advanced Mentoring Workshop 11/14/08

  2. Who am I? • AB in Applied Mathematics from Harvard • PhD in Computer Science from MIT • Part-time work at Thinking Machines Corp in grad school • Joined Sandia National Laboratories as a senior member of technical staff (SMTS) in 1990. • Principal MTS in 1998 (when current ladder instituted) • Distinguished MTS in 2000 • Always in research. Dept name evolved through reorganizations • Theoretical computer science • Optimization and uncertainty quantification • Algorithms and discrete math • Discrete mathematics and complex systems

  3. Mathematical Mercenary • Parallel combinatorial optimization • Polyhedral combinatorics • Experimental algorithmics • Scheduling • Manufacturing and transportation planning • Computational biology • Computer security • Network reliability • Social network analysis • Sensor placement in networks (roadway, water) • Quantum computer architecture design

  4. National Laboratories Environment (Research) • More applied than academia • Impact on problems important to the nation • Less driven by the bottom line than industry • Wealth of research questions • Flexible scheduling • Pay tracks to industry • Every hour charged to a project • Get funding to do what you want to do • Resources (supercomputers, rocket sleds, particle-beam fusion accelerators, …) • Annual formal merit review

  5. Sandia Technical Ladder • Levels • Member of Technical Staff (MTS) • Senior (SMTS)  Assistant professor • Principal (PMTS)  Tenured associate professor • Distinguished (DMTS)  Full professor • Senior Scientist • Fellow • Quotas as move up • Formally based on • Technical ability (breadth and/or depth) • External visibility • Customer contacts/program development • Creativity • Leadership of people, projects, programs

  6. Impact • Quantifiable impact on an important project • Solve a problem you couldn’t before • Solve a problem significantly better than before • Frequently involves code • People use it (especially for important things) • Bringing in funding • Publications • Patents • Major awards (e.g. R&D 100)

  7. Visibility • Talks are an opportunity to shine • Annual department review • Any external review of project or group • Dog & Pony shows for potential or current sponsors • Tailor your talk to your audience • Want them to walk away with • Your one-line technical message • A sense of your competency, vision, integrity, and passion • They don’t care about the details as much as you do • Topic selection (when an option): management attention span

  8. Mentorship • When starting out, attach to a good mentor • Deliver for them • Take advantage of the association to become visible • Learn from them • Then get out from the shadow and lead your own project • Managers tend to associate a project only with the leader • Then become a mentor yourself • Leading a group of others is important • You get to lead by bringing in money • You get to lead by being technically capable and delivering

  9. Other Pluses • Good writing skills • Write clearly and quickly • Be a resource • Have a good network inside and outside the lab • Know who to ask • Keep up with the literature

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