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Distribution engineer skills for your resume and career

Updated January 8, 2025
3 min read
Quoted experts
Robert Saunders P.E.,
Michel Audette Ph.D.
Distribution engineer example skills
Below we've compiled a list of the most critical distribution engineer skills. We ranked the top skills for distribution engineers based on the percentage of resumes they appeared on. For example, 19.6% of distribution engineer resumes contained aided design as a skill. Continue reading to find out what skills a distribution engineer needs to be successful in the workplace.

15 distribution engineer skills for your resume and career

1. Aided Design

Here's how distribution engineers use aided design:
  • Program Development Evaluated vendors and recommended purchase of Computer-Aided Design and Drafting (CADD) System for mapping and substation projects.

2. GIS

A geographic information system (GIS) is a tool for capturing, storing, manipulating, analyzing, managing and presenting various forms of geographic data.

Here's how distribution engineers use gis:
  • Trained co-ops/employees in GIS, Storms and field construction.
  • Created markups of RG&E GIS maps indicating affected poles, lines, and underground facilities.

3. CAD

Here's how distribution engineers use cad:
  • Design customer projects using Bentley Designer CAD software for streamlining solid estimates.
  • Construct CAD drawings to include supporting documents and transmission designs.

4. NESC

Here's how distribution engineers use nesc:
  • Designed facilities in compliance with NESC (National Electric Safety Code) as well as utility specific standards and practices.
  • Engineered transformer upgrades, new pole installations, and underground installations according to NESC specifications and standards.

5. Voltage Drop

Here's how distribution engineers use voltage drop:
  • Created settings and best Capacitor regulator locations for optimal performance and reduced voltage drops on circuits.
  • Implemented voltage drop, flicker, and substation peak demand studies with KVA data.

6. UG

Here's how distribution engineers use ug:
  • Designed OH to UG conversions project on transmission lines that relocated the transmission lines underground.

7. Project Management

Here's how distribution engineers use project management:
  • Developed accurate, clear, and detailed Project Management software deployment and upgrade documentation.
  • Project management working with crews and developers to coordinate and schedule electric utility installations.

8. Cost Estimates

Here's how distribution engineers use cost estimates:
  • Prepared engineering designs using AutoCAD, material and construction specifications, and cost estimates to support system expansions and improvements.
  • Performed job-cost estimates and entered equipment requirements for new projects and upgrade improvements to the electric distribution system.

9. KV

Here's how distribution engineers use kv:
  • Designed Power Distribution System (15 KV, 38 KV -138 KV substations) new subdivisions and commercial customers.
  • Designed, engineering, and participated in creating proposals for electrical transmission projects up to 287 kV transmission lines.

10. Grid

Here's how distribution engineers use grid:
  • Managed 4 projects on behalf of National Grid to include included budget, documentation, and permitting and project meetings.
  • Work with Transmission, Compliance, and Document Control) Charlotte Grid Management Safety Team Lead for companywide Safety Council.

11. ANSI

Here's how distribution engineers use ansi:
  • Provided power flow, protection, NEC, ANSI, UL code applications, trouble shooting of electrical system outages.
  • Developed industrial standards and submitted same to ANSI.

12. Autocad

Here's how distribution engineers use autocad:
  • Worked with AutoCad 2010 to design site maps of water/gas/electrical/fiber installations for our construction crews to use in the field.
  • Created AutoCAD drawings of vertical turbine pumps for proposals and Installation, Operation, and Maintenance (IOM) manuals.

13. Renewable Energy

Here's how distribution engineers use renewable energy:
  • Cooperated with Mechanical Engineer and Energy Manager to perform energy efficiency analysis and return on investment calculations for renewable energy projects.
  • Licensed professional engineer with design, analysis, development and construction experience in the renewable energy industry.

14. Distribution Projects

Here's how distribution engineers use distribution projects:
  • Provided design and construction support for natural gas distribution projects.
  • Support service distribution projects, principally by satellite for Discovery services throughout the North America and South America.

15. Distribution Lines

Here's how distribution engineers use distribution lines:
  • Interfaced with representatives of various companies and governmental agencies in procuring rights-of-way for new power distribution lines.
  • Used Pole Foreman programming to harden our transmission and distribution lines.
top-skills

What skills help Distribution Engineers find jobs?

Tell us what job you are looking for, we’ll show you what skills employers want.

What distribution engineer skills would you recommend for someone trying to advance their career?

Robert Saunders P.E.Robert Saunders P.E. LinkedIn profile

Assistant Department Head, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

Project management and/or leadership training, either at the university they graduated from, or a good online source. Either or both of these would demonstrate the proactive attitude of the student. And get involved in something; community service groups, design a project, anything that shows you are pushing forward professionally and personally, not just sitting at home.

What type of skills will young distribution engineers need?

Michel Audette Ph.D.Michel Audette Ph.D. LinkedIn profile

Associate Professor, Dept. CMSE; Graduate Program Director, Biomedical Engineering Institute, Old Dominion University

One skill that is timeless is the ability to communicate effectively, such as taking a complex design process and distilling it into intuitive slides or reports that lend themselves for senior managers to process in order to come to a decision. An engineer who has that ability will always have some tools in his/her toolbox that makes that individual attractive to a company and to the local technical ecosystem, thus a ripe target for headhunters who willing to champion them to companies looking for top talent. Moreover, speaking and writing well also comes with a vital component of diplomacy, especially in the context of increasingly distributed company workforce: the ability not just to get on with colleagues from different parts of the world, increasingly heterogeneous in terms of gender and possibly sexual preference, but embrace them for who they are. This is often maps to opportunities to travel, as some collaborations lead to meetings face to face, post-covid.

This embrace of heterogeneity is even more relevant in that technical problems being solved are increasingly multi-disciplinary, so that an engineer may need to interact with biologists, physicians, clothing or furniture designers, mathematicians, lawyers, and so on: in my own case, I have to wear a multitude of different hats, while recognizing someone who is a perfect fit for one of those hats when I meet that individual, and making the most of that opportunity to build a truly competent team. Engineers must be able to hold a meaningful, respectful conversation with any of these counterparts, not just discuss code or circuit design. I would advocate that they spend time reading, to maintain their vocabulary and stay abreast of the world around them.

Another one that I advocate is the ability to tap into a revolution that has occurred in parallel with the advent of Internet and cellular technologies, these past 30+ years: the explosion of open-source software tools. I am a committed proponent of open source, as a former contributor to them while previously employed at Kitware (a pioneer in this area, behind VTK, ITK, CMake, and myriad others). I see job ads in Indeed.com that specifically ask for the ability to work with these tools, since they save work and make it possible to produce a prototype in much less time than developing it completely in-house. This ability does not just presuppose the ability to program at a competent level, but other abilities: the ability to track bugs that not be in the calling program, but in the open-source software library itself, the willingness to get answers in the community of developers, the eye for details that extends to graphical processor units that result in accelerations an order of magnitude or better, and so on. These go way beyond writing a self-contained algorithm. Hardware designers may also have similar tools, based on broad standards, Arduino, and the prevalence of 3D printers that make it possible to physically replicate digital models.

Finally, a vital skill is the willingness and ability to keep learning, while embracing revolutions that take place at breathtaking pace. The latest one is the reliance on deep neural networks (DNNs) to synthesize algorithms that can learn and adapt to their data, with much faster performances than feasible with the previous algorithms that DNNs have replaced. The point to make here is not to embrace neural networks in a proximal sense, but that we cannot anticipate what will come next, downstream of DNNs. Graduates of 2021 have to be willing to keep their curiosity and work ethic enough to be responsive to the next wave of technologies, and embrace them for the opportunities that they represent.

What soft skills should all distribution engineers possess?

Florian Solzbacher

Department Chair, Professor, Elect & Computer Engineering, University of Utah

Engineering is about teamwork. All major quantum leaps and most products require extensive system engineering and diverse skills. Engineers need to be able to understand the languages and workflows not only across engineering disciplines but also ranging into business, legal and ethical aspects of their work. This includes communication and project management skills.

List of distribution engineer skills to add to your resume

Distribution engineer skills

The most important skills for a distribution engineer resume and required skills for a distribution engineer to have include:

  • Aided Design
  • GIS
  • CAD
  • NESC
  • Voltage Drop
  • UG
  • Project Management
  • Cost Estimates
  • KV
  • Grid
  • ANSI
  • Autocad
  • Renewable Energy
  • Distribution Projects
  • Distribution Lines
  • Distribution Centers
  • Construction Projects
  • Technical Support
  • NEC
  • Transformers
  • Government Agencies
  • System Reliability
  • Electrical Distribution Systems
  • Engineering Support
  • IEEE
  • Distribution Facilities
  • Customer Loads
  • Storm Restoration
  • Transmission Lines
  • Distribution Circuits
  • Capital Projects
  • Distribution Substations
  • Customer Complaints
  • Coordination Studies
  • Windows

Updated January 8, 2025

Zippia Research Team
Zippia Team

Editorial Staff

The Zippia Research Team has spent countless hours reviewing resumes, job postings, and government data to determine what goes into getting a job in each phase of life. Professional writers and data scientists comprise the Zippia Research Team.

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