Some lessons stay with you long after the project ends. For me, one of the most formative lessons of my career came not in a classroom or corporate office, but in the controlled environment of a sterilization lab. As an engineering student, I expected my first internship to sharpen my technical skills. What I didn’t expect was that it would reshape how I think about technology, people, and the real meaning of value.
That six-month experience taught me that engineering isn’t just about building systems—it’s about building trust. The way I learned to listen, adapt, and deliver in that high-stakes environment continues to shape my work today, and it’s the same philosophy that guides how PVM delivers outcomes for our customers.
My assignment was to redesign the touchscreen interface used in the sterilization lab at a subsidiary of a major pharmaceutical company. This wasn’t a minor update. It was the system technicians relied on to safely sterilize surgical needles—a process where precision wasn’t optional.
The experience taught me what it means to deliver in a mission-critical environment. Code couldn’t just compile. Interfaces couldn’t just look polished. Everything had to work seamlessly and reliably because safety was on the line. But it also wasn’t enough for the system to just work. It had to make life easier for the people using it every day. That meant reducing friction, clarifying workflows, and creating an interface that didn’t just prevent errors but actively supported technicians in doing their jobs more effectively and efficiently.
What drove the solution I ended up delivering wasn’t sitting in front of my computer—it was in the lab itself. I spent time with the operators who used the system every day. I asked questions, had coffee with them, and learned what frustrated them about the old interface.
Their feedback guided every decision I made. By the time the updated system went live, the operators weren’t just satisfied—they were delighted. They could see their own fingerprints on the solution, and that made adoption natural.
Because my internship spanned six months, I had the rare chance as a student to see the project through from start to finish. The company scheduled plant-wide shuts down twice a year to implement major upgrades, which meant I had one critical window to get it right.
That experience taught me the importance of preparation, adaptability, and collaboration across teams. It also gave me my first taste of the satisfaction that comes when a solution is not only delivered on time but embraced by the people who use it.
Looking back, what began as a small interface update became the defining moment that set me on a path toward software and, ultimately, toward building delivery practices at scale.
The lessons I learned—put users first, deliver with quality, adapt under pressure—have become the guiding principles for how we deliver at PVM today:
For me, that first project was more than an introduction to software—it was a lesson in how real impact happens. The most meaningful solutions aren’t just technically sound; they’re built with people in mind, delivered with precision, and shaped by collaboration. Those early lessons continue to guide my work today and have become part of the philosophy we carry forward at PVM: delivering technology that doesn’t just function but creates lasting value for the people who depend on it.