Bharat Matta completed Bachelor degree in Mechanical Engineering from JECRC in the year 2007. I did it in Honours. I never thought I will be achieving that with so many activities during those 4 years. I was also the founder of Yuva, a non-profit foundation. You can learn more about Yuva at www.planetyuva.com. I was also selected during college placement at Reliance communication as Graduate Engineer. However, that didn't work out as my expectation for myself was a bit high towards the vision of life. I had already prepared for GRE during my college days.
Yuva, Mechanical Engineering, GRE and College life, was a passion for me. I never had a moment where I felt like it's a burden on me. Even during university, I enjoyed studying with hostel roommates. I also stayed in the hostel for 4 years. Indeed, even in hostel leadership worked. We improved food menu. It was all decided by every member of the 1st year, 2nd year, 3rd year and 4th year. We did celebrate all the functions. I had very good bonding with my batch mates, teachers and all juniors/seniors. My seniors shaped me a lot. They had their own charm I learned a lot from them. Everyone motivated me to publish my own book name as "Journey of Life" in 2005. It was a huge launch. Sometime, I always think that without two special professors I wouldn’t have achieved all this and they are MP Singh Sir and Manish Jain Sir. Also, I had big support from Director Sir. Sometime, I had long conversations with him regarding Yuva. He has always uplifted me. JECRC is a perfect mix where one can groom himself/herself in all way.
Then, I moved to Detroit for my Master Degree in Industrial engineering at Detroit in 2008. I don’t know why I loved Industrial Engineering but it was awesome. I had always desired from inside to learn new things. US Style is different from India. Every week, they teach you, you give exam, present case study, solve problem and presentation. Their way of teaching is so intense that you have to focus every week and get it done. Every week decides your final grade. I almost completed by 75% of degree in first 8 months. Then I moved to Chicago for my Internship at Motorola. In meantime, there was one rule in my university, where you have to pay 9 credit fee for 1 year and that total to almost $10,000. This doesn't count in your degree program. I wasn’t aware of it and this was extra. More than that I felt like, this is wrong. I am not using any university resource then why should I pay the fee. I started asking questions to my adviser, dean and head of college of engineering. It further went till university president. I also created awareness among student. Slowly it turned into a movement and finally university change the law in favour of students. Now student needs to pay 3 credit fee and that too count in a degree program.
After that, I focused on my internship. During my internship, I was certified as Six Sigma Black Belt from ASQ. Later I joined Motorola as full time. The black belt was the biggest achievement for me as I was too young for that.
I worked with Motorola for 3 years and then part of Motorola was acquired by Intel. So now, I am Intel employee with 7+ Years of experience. Currently, I am located in Dallas. I am working as Customer Experience Process Engineer for Enterprise Customer. It's a way you understand customer problem and figure out the solution. Industrial Engineering, will teach you so many aspects of business. My technical experience working with Mobile & Chip-set Development is also an add-on. One should be always open for learning.
Apart from current job, I am working on new project name as "Ask us Local". It's an initiative where I’m contributing towards American economy to teach local business how they can be smart. You can learn more on web “www.askuslocal.com”.