Seeds of Change
Sherry Hess, Vice
President of Marketing, AWR. Read profile >>
AWR’s current ad, “Ideas Grow
Faster in the Right Environment” graces the front of our 2010 AWR Magazine (6mb PDF) this month. There are many interpretations stemming
from this visual (pun intended) that can be explored. But for now and for the purpose of this blog,
the sprout portrays AWR’s corporate culture: innovation, spawning new ideas,
the right environment for creativity, growth into new markets, seeds of change…
Rather than recreate that cover
story here, I invite you to download the magazine online and read it for yourself. Instead, in this blog I’m going to sprout out
in another direction. .. academia and
university outreach.
AWR recently gave
root to a new growth opportunity for our software in the academic
community. At the Electrical and
Computer Engineering Department Heads Association (ECEDHA) Annual Conference in
Florida this past March, I announced in my ECEDHA Perspectives
interview AWR’s Graduate
Gift Initiative, which provides qualified* 2010 graduates a
free, fully-functional, one-year term license of Microwave
Office and Visual
System Simulator (VSS) software suites - inclusive of AXIEM 3D planar EM
software. The goal of the initiative is to give graduating electrical
engineering students a career head start by providing hands-on exposure to
AWR's high-frequency design software.
This initiative is a follow on to our Preferred
University Program, which works with universities worldwide to provide
students with access to RF/microwave software tools. These programs have been
launched in direct response to industry
and academia expressing the need for students to have hands-on experience with
these tools prior to graduating and entering the job market.
And, most recently, AWR has announced the donation of
free licenses of our software as the prize award to the winners of the IMS/MTT
2010 Power Amplifier Student Design Contest.
What better way to sow seeds of change and spawn the
growth of new ideas, new engineers, new technologies, etc. than to enrich the
academic environment by providing the software engineering students need to
learn and grow from the classroom and into their first job? Our students of
today are the future of the industry—we need to empower them with the best and
latest tools so they are prepared to flourish.

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