Design World – WOMEN IN ENGINEERING – OCTOBER 2021

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2021 Women in Engineering

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Ingrid Tay Technical Training Manager

Microchip Technology Bachelor of Science in Engineering, Arizona State University Master of Business Administration, Grand Canyon University

Ingrid Tay is based at Microchip’s global headquarters in Chandler, Arizona. She oversees the Technical Training Writing Services team, which supports the company’s engineering and sales functions. She joined Microchip in 2013 after graduating with a Bachelor of Science (BS) degree in engineering from Arizona State University. In 2020, she earned a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Grand Canyon University. She is also active in introducing students of all ages to robotics and engineering, working to support and staff programs including the FIRST Robotics Competition international program for high school students. She is a co-founder of the Building Dreams Robotics organization, which promotes Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) among students in underserved communities. DESIGN WORLD

MICROCHIP_Ingrid Tay_WIE Paid Profile 10-21_Vs5.LL.indd 173

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Talk about the culture at your company. What makes it inclusive or supportive of women in engineering and automation? I really believe Microchip’s culture is one-of-a-kind. All of my managers have been very supportive of the advocacy for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) that I do outside of work. Microchip has given me the opportunity to volunteer at FIRST Robotics Competition and VEX Robotics events. Many Microchip female employees like myself have participated as judges and mentors at multiple robotics and science fair events. Moreover, Microchip shows its support for engineering by sponsoring multiple robotics teams in Arizona. In addition, I’ve had the opportunity to represent my company as a Women in Computer Science and Engineering panelist at the Arizona Science Tech Festival where we provided advice to women working as engineers and young engineering students. Also, I often speak to minority students at engineering summer programs about my college experience and as a working professional. I encourage them to continue in engineering and talk about how companies such as Microchip support women in engineering fields, and how our jobs are very rewarding. Describe a recent company project (in which you were involved) that went particularly well. How did you and your team go about ensuring success? We recently moved all our customer-facing training content to a new web platform to improve the user experience and our content management. Looking back, with this large project successfully behind us, what made it such a positive outcome for the company was our strategy execution. At the beginning of the project, the managers from all the teams came together to develop a strategy. We then went back to our individual teams and identified their roles and responsibilities and provided clear direction. As we were executing the strategy, we constantly asked for team feedback. We needed to know what was working and what we needed to improve. It was important to take all the input into consideration and also to keep the team well informed as decisions were being made. Managers made themselves available to answer questions as they arose, and this kept blockers and potential bottlenecks to a minimum while addressing concerns. In the end, this was a terrific cross-functional project that brought people together to collaborate and complete a very critical project for the corporation in a timely way. For the rest of Ingrid Tay’s insights, visit www.designworldonline.com/WiE.

www.designworldonline.com

October 2021

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10/14/21 2:38 PM


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Würth Indsutry North America - Sandy Emry

3min
pages 108-109

Wolfspeed - Yueying Liu

3min
page 107

Sager Electronics - Lisa Auffrey

8min
pages 104-106

Quantum Devices - Samantha Ludt

2min
page 103

Porex - Denisa Peshkatari

2min
page 102

Phoenix Contact - Melissa Sommer

3min
page 101

maxon - Virginie Mialane

2min
page 98

Microchip Technology - Ingrid Tay

3min
page 99

Mitsubishi Electric Automation - Agnieszka Zupancic

2min
page 100

Master Electronics - Jennifer Paukert

2min
page 97

igus - Nicole Lang

3min
page 96

Honeywell Process Solutions - Alicia Kempf

2min
page 95

Teri Ivaniszyn

9min
pages 89-91

Encoder Products Company - Sarah Walter GE Digital - Sowjanya Chalamkuri, Kristen Sanderson ............................... 167/168

8min
pages 92-94

Transmission Company Inc. - Toha Poveda ECIA - Tobi Cornell, Juliet Rene Fajardo,

3min
page 88

CentroMotion - Miriam Prieto

2min
page 86

Accumold - Angela Williams

2min
page 84

Digi-Key - Autumn Richardson

2min
page 87

Advantech - Shannon Steward

2min
page 85

Dr. Amy Wang

8min
pages 78-83

Jill Tietjen

12min
pages 70-77

Karen Panetta

11min
pages 62-69

Maureen Lincoln

7min
pages 44-49

Sibongile Manthata

6min
pages 56-61

Danielle Lower

9min
pages 50-55

Caitlin Kalinoswki

9min
pages 30-37

Hester Anderiesen Le Riche

7min
pages 38-43

Ella Atkins

11min
pages 12-19

Amanda French

8min
pages 24-29

Kara Branch

4min
pages 20-23
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