Don't worry about getting a job if you end up getting an engineering degree. Engineering degrees are not all that easy to get compared to other degrees and employers know that. But also don't be surprised if you aim to go into a job in one engineering field and end up somewhere totally different. That's what happened to most of my fellow classmates as they've graduated. With the exception of the other folks who went to graduate or professional school like me, I think maybe two people out of 30 every year end up working in exactly what they started school for. I'm a biological engineer, which is basically a catch-all for people who want to do engineering but don't exactly know what kind of engineering. Technically most people like to do medically-related things when they're a BE but we take pretty much a little bit of everything, ranging from the basic MAE classes to all of the biochem and organic, process/industrial engineering classes, fluids and some civil stuff, as well as more-than-basic programming and some EE stuff. I personally like it a bunch as I get to have my hands in a little bit of everything and get a broad knowledge of a lot of different engineering fields. The credits are a little high- I'll have something like 150 when I graduate as I didn't try to squeeze out some of the not-actually-but-technically-optional classes.
But to tell the truth, it does not matter what you do as long as you at least minimally enjoy it. I had a guy in my classes that was like the other 98% of my classmates and wanted to go into medical device design because that's the "new and hip thing" and also quite lucrative. He's now designing bridges and sewer lines instead of bone scaffolds and stents. But he couldn't be happier as for the most part, engineering is engineering. Lots of engineers also never do a day of actual engineering in their lives. I know several pretty well that got hired on to supervise engineers and other workers. They simply became managers and worked their way up the corporate ladder like any other business-school grad did. The big difference is that somebody with a BBA doesn't get paid nearly as well as somebody with an engineering degree, probably because the engineer can go out and get another job that does pay more while business-school grads tend to have to work their way up the ladder a bit more before they can command much of a salary. Pay their dues, so to speak, because most don't pay nearly as much of those in college as hard science students do.
If you decide that you don't want to do engineering after you're done, then you still have good prospects. Any graduate or professional school, especially those in sciences, will be happy to take on an engineer as most engineers that would be less than hard workers have been weeded out by the second semester of undergrad. The grad or professional schools will even go as far to let engineering students in who have a little lower grades than other majors simply because the curriculum really is hard. A 3.5 GPA in engineering and As and Bs in science classes will make for a good application for medical school, whereas a biology major with only a 3.5 GPA will likely get their app placed in the circular file.