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The PCB Designer of the Future: Blending Innovation, Technology, and Sustainability
February 3, 2025 | Stephen V. Chavez, Siemens EDAEstimated reading time: 1 minute

The global demand for electronics is skyrocketing, fueled by rapid technological advancements and groundbreaking innovations across many industries, including automotive, telecommunications, healthcare, and consumer electronics. PCB design is the foundation of electronic hardware and lies at the heart of this evolution.
PCB design has always existed in a dynamic and ever-evolving landscape, but in the past few decades, the pace of transformation has been nothing short of revolutionary. It drives everything from smartphones and medical equipment to industrial automation and aerospace technology. PCB design is pivotal in propelling technological progress and innovation forward. This evolution in PCB design has produced multiple specialties, but I want to focus on a specific specialist known as the PCB designer (aka the printed circuit engineer). I strongly believe this profession is the true master of this domain and plays a crucial role in designing a PCB.
I have experienced the dramatic evolution of the profession and role of the PCB designer over the past few decades. I was fortunate to enter the field in the late 1980s, which means that I have never had to experience “hand taping” a PCB design. The role of the PCB designer and the PCB design process have come a long way from manual hand-taping and drafting to sophisticated computer-aided design. Today's designers are part of a high-tech field requiring technical expertise, collaborative abilities, and creative problem-solving. If I were to look into a crystal ball, I would see that the next 10 years promise even more profound changes in the tools, responsibilities, and challenges PCB designers will face.
The Changing Role of PCB Designers
PCB designers of the future will create not just layouts or place components; they will serve as system-level architects. Their work will encompass a broader range of responsibilities, requiring collaboration with hardware, software, and mechanical engineering teams. Key shifts include:
- AI-augmented creativity: AI will handle routine tasks like auto-routing and optimization, freeing designers to focus on system integration, trade-offs, what-if scenarios, and innovation.
- Sustainability advocacy: Designers will prioritize eco-friendly PCBs by selecting recyclable materials, optimizing layouts for energy efficiency, and balancing layout solvability, performance, and manufacturing with environmental concerns.
- Interdisciplinary expertise: Combining knowledge from electrical and mechanical engineering, materials science, manufacturing, and software development will be essential to navigate the complexities of next-generation technologies.
Read the rest of this article in the January 2025 issue of Design007 Magazine.
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I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week
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Zhen Ding Expands PCB into Semiconductors at SEMICON Taiwan 2025; Advantech Drives AI Smart Parks
09/12/2025 | Zhen DingZhen Ding Technology Holding Co., Ltd., a global leader in the PCB industry, returned to exhibit at SEMICON Taiwan 2025. Positioning itself as an industry pioneer in "PCB expanding into semiconductors," the company showcased its latest strategic layout
Direct Imaging System Market Size to Hit $4.30B by 2032, Driven by Increasing Demand for High-Precision PCB Manufacturing
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Advint Incorporated Brings Artificial Intelligence to Electroplating Training
09/11/2025 | Advint IncorporatedAdvint Incorporated is introducing a new dimension to its electroplating training programs: the integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI). This initiative reflects the company’s commitment to providing PCB fabricators and manufacturers in the USA and Canada with training that is practical, forward-looking, and directly relevant to today’s production challenges.