Hello John
I agree a little with GT22 regarding its questions.
I think you have to remain very humble, facing one after the other the difficulties you will encounter. The big mistake would be to put the cart before the horse by succumbing to compulsive purchases of the latest generation of equipment.
It's all well and good to have substantial resources, but you also need to have the knowledge and skills that go with it to be able to use them. Why not through training, but we have to face the fact that we cannot do everything ourselves and that it is very often more profitable and efficient to seek knowledge from experts.
You seem to be getting into Solidworks without knowing it, so why go for the premium version? Do you really need it? Do you know the difference with the other versions? You'll have to learn to think in 3D, to draw parts, to make assemblies, to manage your folders and files, to be methodical... That's already substantial!
Then comes the drawing, and there is no secret there, you need knowledge! if you don't know what a cartridge is, a nomenclature, a tolerancing, a coast chain, an ISO standard... The software won't do it for you!
You also talk about scanner Faro, do you have any knowledge of metrology? it's not the same thing between taking a caliper measurement and making 3D reconstructions from measured elements, which will then have to be compared to the theoretical tolerancing of objects
You also mention the Simulation module. Do you have any notions in the resistance of materials? on finite element theory? Do you know how to make hypotheses of mechanical simplification? And above all, do you know how to interpret a result of constraints or deformation? because the software will give you a result anyway but there is every chance that it will be wrong!
In short, I don't want to scare you, but the 4 points I addressed (and I'm probably forgetting some) correspond to 4 different professions! To learn how to do all this, it's years of training as well as years of experience!