Strategic Resources for the Engineer Who Is Ready to Execute
Free tools to help you understand your skills, your role, and where the country is going.
Technical ability alone is no longer enough. To succeed as an engineer today, you need context.
You need to understand how Zimbabwe’s National Development Strategy 2 (NDS 2) actually works on the ground. And you need an honest picture of where you stand—right now—in relation to those demands.
The resources below are available for free. They are designed to help you move beyond academic theory and into the practical, execution-focused mindset required to build a strong and sustainable engineering career.
Resource 1: NDS 2 for Young Engineers
A practical guide to workforce development in Zimbabwe (2026–2030).For many engineers, NDS 2 feels like distant policy—important, but abstract. This guide brings it down to ground level. It shows you exactly how national development depends on engineers who can execute, maintain, and improve real systems.
Inside this guide, you’ll learn:
- Why engineers are central to NDS 2 The hidden assumption behind the strategy—and why execution-ready engineers are the real drivers of progress.
- Where you fit in Clear roles for engineers across infrastructure, energy, agriculture, and industrial development.
- What the work actually looks like Why long-term value lies in maintenance, optimization, diagnostics, and system reliability.
- What “readiness” really means A practical definition of being functional inside real-world systems—not just qualified on paper.
Resource 2: The NDS 2 Engineering Skills Reality Check
An honest self-assessment for the modern engineer.Knowing something and being able to do something are not the same thing. This workbook is not a test and it’s not about passing or failing. It’s a diagnostic tool—a mirror—to help you see how prepared you really are for the demands of real engineering work.
Use this workbook to:
- Measure doing vs. knowing Can you turn theory into outcomes that people and systems can depend on?
- Evaluate the five readiness pillars Assess your Technical, Execution, Professional, Communication, and Contextual skills.
- Identify your gaps clearly See exactly where you need to improve before stepping fully into the field.
- Create a focused growth plan Turn weaknesses into a deliberate, structured practice schedule.