The Free Press Journal

How a grad student from Chennai made it to Microsoft

Nivedita Rajasekara­n, who did her Masters in Game Design from Full Sail University, has worked at Amazon, Zygobot, and Epic Games before landing at Microsoft

- NIVEDITA RAJASEKARA­N

Nivedita "Nive" Punayur Rajasekara­n came to Full Sail, a private University in Florida, from India, to pursue her dream of working in the video game industry. Now Nive works as a Production Partner Manager at Microsoft and is putting the knowledge she gathered as a student to the best use.

Nive grew both personally and profession­ally during her time as a Game Design Master’s student and sought mentorship at every turn while consistent­ly pursuing ways to further her knowledge. The grad familiaris­ed herself with gaming engines like Unreal and Unity even before her first day of classes was conducted. And, through the relationsh­ips she built on campus, Nivedita found something special at Full Sail.

"Everybody welcomed me like it was my home. Being an internatio­nal student, I always worried about it. But whenever I reached out for help, everybody was ready to lend that hand and teach me new stuff."

Serving as Vice President of the Internatio­nal Student Society and fostering relationsh­ips with grads and faculty outside her degree program, I became a master of networking.

"I didn't know the meaning of 'network' back then," she says of her first few months at school. "But I could see so many successful grads shining out there in their own way."

Nivedita may have attended Full Sail because she wanted to create games, but the grad quickly found her passion for leadership. "I want to change the lives of differentl­y-abled kids, make new devices or games, and put in a lot of creative ideas," she says. "I need to be in that leadership role to communicat­e [those things] to people."

Microsoft was not only impressed with Nivedita's technical and leadership skills, but also with her overall demeanor.

"All of these skills made me more bold and outgoing in my interview," she recalls. "My boss was like, ‘I knew it. I knew you were that bad-ass woman.'

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India