Make the Smart Move
April 7, 2026 | Stephen V. Chavez, Siemens EDAEstimated reading time: 1 minute
It’s incredibly easy to become fixated on shiny new EDA software, the latest high-speed routing algorithms, or the most advanced fabrication techniques. New tools and technologies are creating sophisticated simulation platforms that automate routing, check design rules, and simulate performance. However, they cannot replicate the nuanced judgment, imaginative solutions to space constraints, or collaborative spirit that define printed circuit engineering excellence. That is your most significant return on investment.
The Human Element: The Unsung Hero of PCB Innovation
Printed circuit engineering translates customer requirements into complex system architectures and electrical schematics that become physical realities by navigating signal integrity challenges, optimizing for manufacturability, and ensuring reliability across diverse environments. It ties directly to the three competing perspectives of the designer’s triangle: solvability, performance, and manufacturing.
Prioritizing the printed circuit engineer can be a game-changer in the following ways:
- Unlocks potential in design and analysis. A highly skilled and well-supported PCB engineer can extract far more value from a standard EDA suite than an under-trained or disengaged engineer can from the most sophisticated one. Training them in advanced layout techniques, signal integrity analysis, power integrity simulation, and DFM principles helps them better understand the underlying physics of high-speed signals, push the boundaries of layer stackups, and even foresee manufacturing challenges the tool's automated features might miss.
- Fosters innovation and adaptability in a rapidly evolving field. Engineers who are familiar with new substrate materials, advanced packaging, and evolving industry standards are far more adaptable. They can quickly grasp new technologies, integrate them into existing design workflows, and even envision entirely new applications, from flexible circuits to embedded components, that the tool's creators might not have imagined.
To continue reading this article, which originally appeared in the March 2026 edition of I-Connect007 Magazine, click here.
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