Campus Forward Award Winner:
Autodesk
About Autodesk
COMPANY SIZE:
Publicly Traded Large Enterprise (1000+ employees)
INDUSTRY:
Consumer Technology
The Pillars of an Award-Winning Program
The Highlights of Autodesk's Approach to Early Career Hiring
Building an Innovative and Multi-Faceted Approach to University Recruiting
Autodesk had a school agnostic approach to intern recruitment before it was a trend. They first target students through the Diversity Partnerships such as Students Rising Above, Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers, Society of Women Engineers, AfroTech, TAPIA and NACME, to name a few, to build a diverse talent pipeline for intern and full-time opportunities. They promote jobs to all schools. They use a skills-based approach to assessing candidates. Last year, they had 115 US interns from over 70 different universities. School doesn’t matter when getting hired at Autodesk. Talent Acquisition also participates in bi-weekly inclusive sourcing hours that help educate recruiters and scouts on inclusive sourcing topics and dedicated time to expand sourcing pools.
Crafting a Standout Candidate Experience
Candidate experience is top priority at Autodesk. It starts with a school agnostic sourcing approach. They host Candidate Connect virtual info sessions during fall and spring semesters. Students learn about tech and non-tech roles and gain valuable advice from hiring managers, recruiters, and recent interns about what to expect in the interview process and the internship itself. Once candidates are in the interview process, Autodesk commits to candidate prep calls to all candidates to explain what to expect and to provide insights about who they are meeting during interviews. Post offer acceptance, candidates are included on a keep-in-touch campaign to keep them engaged until they start. In 2022, AutoDesk will start surveying candidates from the interview process to gather more insights on how the team can continue to improve their candidate experience.
Moving the Needle on Diversity & Inclusion
The team aligns with Autodesk’s 3-year strategic goal to increase representation of women in tech, women in sales, and underrepresented people of color in the US employee population. Through partnerships with diverse organizations like Society of Women Engineers, Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers, National Society of Black Engineers, Power to Fly, Students Rising Above, AfroTech, TAPIA and NACME, along with outreach and program engagement with HBCUs and organizations for women and ethnic minorities, Autodesk has been successfully building a diverse talent pipeline for intern and full-time opportunities. In addition to recruitment, they provide access to training and development courses, employee resource groups and a mentorship program offering 1:1 support.
Investing in Impactful Internship Programs
Autodesk’s global internships are project-based, learning assignments that contribute to the student’s education and utilize the student’s course of study. Interns contribute to meaningful projects, are mentored by industry leaders, work alongside peers from universities all over the world and participate in tech talks, project showcase and other activities designed to support their personal and professional development. They enjoy nearly all of the same perks as full-time employees, including health benefits, paid holidays, paid volunteer time, membership in employee resource groups, work-from-home reimbursement, access to free software, employee discounts and eligibility for rewards and recognition. One fact that the team is very proud of is the level of support they receive for the intern program from the Autodesk CEO. Not only is he generous in funding the efforts, but he always engages with the intern population by giving thoughtful presentations and career advice.
Supporting the Growth and Development of Entry-Level Talent
New grads become part of a peer group community as soon as the offer is accepted. They join a keep-in-touch program with other student hires to create a culture of belonging from the start. Hiring managers, recruiters and recent grads are all involved in communications and virtual events. Autodesk will offer local office tours when it's safe to do so. Once they start, they’re part of a robust onboarding experience that begins with a cohort of new hires in virtual onboarding sessions in week one and a continuous onboarding experience that lasts through the first 90 days. New hires also get immediate access to a formalized mentor program and Bravely. Bravely is an employee benefit in support of workplace health. The platform connects Autodesk employees with professional coaches for confidential conversations about whatever they're facing at work—performance, growth, relationships, company culture, and more.
Congratulations to the team at Autodesk for being selected as one of the winners of RippleMatch's 2022 Campus Forward Awards!
RippleMatch's Campus Forward Awards recognizes the top early career teams and programs in the nation. Through a detailed application process, early career teams shared their approach to recruitment, candidate experience, D&I, and internship & entry-level programming. The programs picked for this award represent the best of the best, selected from applications submitted by campus recruiting teams across industries.
See all Award Winners for the category of Mid-Size Early Career Programs below
Learn more about RippleMatch, the company behind the Campus Forward Awards, by clicking here.