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Elkem technical trainee programme: Hi Elkem, nice to digitalise you!
What happens when a freshly graduated chemist swaps his lab coat for digital transformation projects and real-world industry challenges? That’s exactly the journey one of our technical trainees has taken since joining Elkem's technical trainee programme.
Two years thereafter, while debugging the new Electronic Lab Notebook (ELN) system implemented in Elkem Silicones, I would recall the hot afternoon in Paris when I graduated as a chemist, ending my academic career and beginning my professional journey.
At that time, the concept of AI was gaining global attention through the widespread adoption of ChatGPT, yet I hadn't realised how this new technology would impact both the future of our industry and my personal career path. Now, after nearly a year of outplacement experience in digital transformation projects at Elkem, I've gained a deeper understanding of the critical significance and value that digitalisation offers, which has solidified my career direction.
From the ivory tower to hands-on experience
My studies in the French engineering grandes écoles system fundamentally shaped my professional DNA. In this pedagogical philosophy, theoretical rigour marries industrial pragmatism, and business impact is pursued through iterative implementation rather than academic perfection.
With this background, I chose to bypass pure research roles to instead seek industrial challenges where equations meet execution. What a young graduate needs most when facing this school-to-industry transition, is an opportunity to see what work is like in actual industry before diving deeply into it. Fortunately, I found Elkem’s technical trainee programme.
My first rotation was with Elkem Silicones in Shanghai, based at the newly established APAC R&D centre. My primary focus involved implementing a global ELN system for the Silicones division, alongside supporting other digital transformation initiatives. As a trained chemist, I initially harboured frustration about being distanced from laboratory work. However, as I learned more about the strategic value of digitalisation in the chemical manufacturing field, this gradually dissipated.
KATELIN Project: Architecting the database for next-gen silicone innovation
I was introduced to the KATELIN project team on my first day at Elkem. This project aims to establish a new R&D database for the Silicones division, replacing paper lab notebooks with a delicately configured digital platform where technicians and operators can securely record, share and review research data from all locations. It’ll facilitate efficient use of R&D data, from 5S lab management to data modelling, to enhance the auditability of our products and lab automation – all of which helps ensure our strong position and competitivity on global market.
During weeks of intensive training sessions, I learned fast and with passion, taking responsibility as the system’s APAC region product owner by the end of training. I joined this project in its early stage for APAC, which allowed great autonomy in organising regional deployment.
My chemist background helped me to understand the needs of our colleagues in labs: minimising endless paperwork and accelerating their innovative designs and experiments. I collected their needs by spending time communicating with them and trying to see things from their perspective, and in the process, my communication and collaboration skills were strengthened.
I am grateful to be participating in Project KATELIN. It has introduced me to our Silicones R&D teams with their amazing products and professionalism, and it showed me the importance of a project being well organised, managed, supported and executed.
The project has also demonstrated the challenges of change management. Through deployment in APAC, we have been convincing users to adjust and standardise their work processes. This could be arduous at times, but as young graduates, we want nothing more than to apply our knowledge and initiatives to make a difference!
I am now in my second rotation with Elkem's IT Department in Lyon, continuing my work on Project Katelin as a Data Engineer. My primary responsibility involves developing & optimising data models to enable visualisation and analysis of user-input experimental data.
My next ambition is to connect our R&D database with Elkem’s AI assistant, helping us use advanced computer tools to find patterns in our data and make better predictions for developing new products. For instance, just like how online shopping platforms recommend products based on previous purchases, our AI tool could suggest possible directions for new product research by learning from past project outcomes. This will help us work more efficiently and cut-off time wasting on repetitive lab experiments.
Embarking on a learning adventure as a trainee
The great thing about being a technical trainee is that we can experience what the authentic local life is like at various Elkem facilities across continents and countries, both on-site and outside the office. Through our placements, we’re granted multidimensional learning opportunities, not only through our core projects, but also via collaboration with our exceptional colleagues, participation in competency- and methodology-focused Elkem Business System (EBS) seminars and other external trainings, and even cultural immersion.
This year, I had my first skiing experience of my life in a beautiful ski valley of Åre in Sweden. After a morning filled with practicing the "pizza slice" technique and countless close encounters with the ground, I finally managed to ski down the beginner slope from top to bottom without stopping. The rush of gliding down the snow was exhilarating, but what I cherished even more was the sense of achievement that came with learning a new skill!
So far while venturing through life as a trainee, the most important things I’ve learnt are how to learn and what to learn. Not all knowledge proves equally valuable. Thus, choosing wisely both the things that are helpful to learn and the people who are brilliant to learn from, while also remaining resilient when facing challenges, has been the priceless treasure I have found along the journey.
About Jun Jiang
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After completing his bachelor's degree in bioengineering from Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Jun Jiang earned his master's degree in engineering (d |
Chimie ParisTech.