I had been advised to learn this tools. I want to know is this mostly used tools or there are too many tools that i need to learn for keeping my engineering journey on?
What is the advantage of this tools?
I had been advised to learn this tools. I want to know is this mostly used tools or there are too many tools that i need to learn for keeping my engineering journey on?
What is the advantage of this tools?
Some questions already answered here
https://www.engineersheaven.org/forum/topic/239?title=What-is-ETABS?
https:///...een-ETABS-and-STAAD?
They are industry-accepted standard tools, but they are not the only tools.
Different organizations use different software based on project type, workflow, and client requirements.
In civil engineering:
Codes are mandatory (IS 456, IS 1893, ACI, Eurocode, etc.)
Software is a tool, not a standard
The design must comply with codes, not the software choice.
2. Industry Usage Pattern (Reality) Commonly Used & Widely AcceptedETABS → Building design (very common)
STAAD.Pro → Industrial, bridges, general structures
These are considered de facto standards, meaning:
Most consultants recognize them
Clients accept their outputs
Engineers are commonly trained on them
SAP2000 – complex structural systems
SAFE – slab & foundation design
Robot Structural Analysis – used by BIM-heavy firms
Tekla Structures – steel detailing & BIM
Revit Structure – BIM coordination
MIDAS – bridges & infrastructure
RISA – some international firms
Residential / commercial buildings → ETABS
Industrial plants → STAAD
Bridges → MIDAS / SAP2000
Some clients specify:
“Model to be done in ETABS”
“BIM compatible software required”
Firms stick to tools:
Their engineers are trained in
Their internal checking process supports
Software licenses are expensive
Smaller firms may use fewer tools
“Software may differ from organization to organization, but structural principles, load paths, and code compliance remain the same.”
This shows you understand engineering fundamentals, not just software.
6. What Interviewers Expect From a FresherThey do not expect you to know every software.
They expect you to:
Understand why a tool is used
Know basic workflow
Be able to adapt to new tools
Learn ETABS as your base (building focus)
Understand concepts, not button-clicking
Be flexible: tools change, fundamentals don’t
ETABS and STAAD are widely accepted industry tools, but different organizations use different software depending on project requirements, client specifications, and internal practice.