General Motors plans to hire 10,000 software developers, programmers
DETROIT: Now hiring in Detroit: Software developers and
programmers. General Motors is moving past layoffs and the Motor City's
rusty, low-tech image. It's setting out on its own to develop software
and invent the most advanced gizmos for your car.
America's biggest automaker plans to hire up to 10,000 computer
professionals in the next three-to-five years as it tries to lead the
auto industry with cutting-edge technology.
It's a bold and expensive move, counter to the industry's history of
buying software and other electronic applications from outside
companies. Experts say it's also the start of a trend as manufacturers
realize that software is among the few things that will set them apart
from competitors.
"The companies that build the software themselves in general are going
to have an advantage," says David Kirkpatrick, author of a book about
Facebook and CEO of Techonomy Media, a New York firm that specializes in
setting up technology conferences. "If you outsource the development of
software in particular to others, you can risk ... your own ability to
compete in the future.''
General Motors isn't alone in trying to move more technology development
under its roof. But the plans of its biggest competitor, Ford Motor,
aren't nearly as ambitious.
GM's aims to bring 90 per cent of its computer technology work into the
company by recruiting workers to four new information technology centers
around the nation. Ford recently joined GM, BMW AG and Renault-Nissan
in opening a technology office in California's Silicon Valley, although
it's staffed by only about 15 people.
GM's first "Information Technology Innovation Center" was announced last
month in Austin, Texas, with plans to hire 500 programmers and software
experts. And Monday the carmaker unveiled plans to hire 1,500 more at a
second computer center in Warren, Michigan, on the campus of its big
tech center. GM already has product designers, engineers and other
technical experts at the site, including the team that created the
Chevrolet Volt electric car.
The other two sites haven't been revealed.
Staff at the centers will try to stay on top of software trends. They'll
develop the latest ways to link smartphones with cars or control a
vehicle's heating and air conditioning with voice commands. They'll also
be counted on to invent technology that no one's thought of yet. And GM
also sees long-term cost savings when the centers are fully in
operation.
"We're currently seeking the next generation of game-changers to help us
usher in a new age of automotive innovation,'' says GM Chief
Information Officer Randy Mott, who was Hewlett-Packard's CIO until he
joined GM in February.
Although there are shortages of programmers and software engineers in
some parts of the country, GM should be able to recruit enough talent by
setting up shop in four different regions, experts say. With the
tech-hub of Austin and GM's home base in Detroit already covered, the
most likely locations for the next two centers are on the West Coast,
experts say.
GM says it will offer competitive wages and benefits to pull in recent
college graduates and experienced information technology professionals.
The company's iconic brand status will help attract people, experts say.
But offering competitive pay will cost GM. Software engineers make
$60,000 to $70,000 a year right out of college, and experienced workers
can make more, says James Stoeckmann, senior compensation specialist for
World at Work, an organization of human resources executives who deal
with pay issues.
Expensive or not, the strategy is correct for GM as it tries to
differentiate its products from other automakers, says Michael Robinet,
managing director of IHS Automotive, an industry consulting firm. With
the gap in quality between brands shrinking, the way a car drives and
its electronics soon will be the only things that set a company apart,
he says.
Currently, GM and most automakers rely on outside companies for touch
screen and other technology. But often those companies sell the
technology to multiple carmakers, or new software is sold in an
expensive bidding war, Robinet says. "If they have their own skunk works
and they find a new technology, they are guaranteed to bring it to
market first," he says.
Ford, for instance, worked with Microsoft Inc. on its pioneering Sync
system, which brought voice activation technology into cars ahead of
most competitors. But Ford only had exclusive use of the system for a
year before Microsoft was able to license it to other companies, namely
Hyundai and Kia.
Outside companies have so much expertise that it will take years for GM
to catch up, making it unlikely that the company will completely walk
away from outside firms, Robinet says.
Yet with software gaining so much importance in the way all companies
operate, it's even possible that GM will find its next generation of
leaders somewhere in the computer centers, says Kirkpatrick. "CEOs of
every company in the future are going to have to be software thinkers,"
he says.
Source : TOI
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