Questions & Answers Rajkumar Rajappan HILMIL SOLUTIONS What was your first automotive job and why were you interested in the industry? My first automotive job was with CG Smith Software in 2000. I was responsible for developing transmission control and engine management software for the General Motors Powertrain division. In the last 19 years I have worked on nearly every major vehicle electronic control unit (ECU) at global automakers and Tier 1 suppliers. Cars and embedded automotive software were and continue to be my passion. Your greatest achievement? The professional highlights are being named Best Project Manager and winning Best Project Award at Bosch India. It was also a huge honor to be named 2014 Alliance Partner of the Year by National Instruments. Personally, it is the good fortune to have caring parents and in-laws, a supportive and smart wife and son as well as lovable sisters and brothers-in-law. Without this strong family support, I wouldn't be able to take so many professional risks. What was your biggest failure and what did it teach you? I don't remember any major failure. I take life as it comes and don't worry about what went wrong and why it happened. What is your current challenge at work? Knowing and understanding the many different cultures in the many different countries of the many different people I work with every day. I am still learning. The second-biggest challenge is coping with shorter product life cycles. Everyone on our team has to work together so we can meet tough deadlines without sacrificing on quality. What about the auto industry surprises you? When I started in the automotive sector it was more mechanical driven and less about electronics and software. There were a few ECUs in cars, which meant there was a few thousand lines of code. Today the industry focus is more on software and electronics. There are more and more ECUs and cars have multi-million lines of code. This will only increase as we move toward automated driving. What is the best advice you have ever received? After graduation I had to pick between working in web application software or embedded software. I asked my friend's brother, who was an engineering manager at a U.S.-based IT company, for his advice. He asked me what I was passionate about and the answer was embedded software. I remain very happy about my choice. 58