“We Were a Fun Bunch”
26 EXHIBITORS AT THE FIRST IKOM
And so, a dozen or so student representatives got to work themselves. The organizers of that time are still networked well today, including Ursula Feulner, Brigitte Zipper, Hubert Aunkofer, Thorsten Schlicht, Markus Wächter, Peter Weber, Thomas Lang (all with degrees in Mechanical Engineering) and Christian Jarosch (degree in Architecture). They organized a location and booth builders, recruited companies, wrote invoices, took care of advertising, designed the logo, which is still recognizable today, and organized accompanying lecture series.
A VARIETY OF EXPERIENCES AT TUM
What advice would Thomas Peither give today’s students? “Don’t take yourself so seriously. Professional and private satisfaction is only possible in the right environment. Anyone who is grateful for their environment and help others to develop will rarely have to worry about their future. I am thankful that I was able to have a lot of extra-curricular experiences at TUM. That probably influenced my life just as much as lectures did”. After completing their studies, Barbara and Thomas Peither worked in different industrial companies before they set up a publisher together in 1999. Today it publishes the standard reference works for the pharmaceutical industry.
Today, 30 years later, around 100 TUM volunteer students organize four career fairs and other free events each year to promote personal contact between students, Alumni and companies. In addition to the large career fair, which takes place every June in the building of the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering on the Garching campus, TUM also holds its own smaller fairs for jobs in the fields of construction and life sciences. Since last year, the students have also been awarding the IKOM Award to companies that have lived up to their corporate responsibility as future employers. First prize winner 2018: TUM Alumnus Andreas Duschl (degree in Electrical Engineering and IT, 2001) and his family business.
Barbara and Thomas Peither
Both with a degree in Mechanical Engineering, 1990
Barbara Peither studied Mechanical Engineering at TUM from 1984 to 1990, specializing in Aerospace. Her first job after completing her studies was at the Fraunhofer Institute for Industrial Engineering in Stuttgart. Her work focused on designing the organization of development projects in various medium-sized companies like Loewe and Fendt. After two and a half years, she switched to production planning at Vaillant – gas appliance manufacturer in Remscheid – working on interesting company-wide projects. After the birth of the couple’s first daughter and their move to Basel, she took on freelance projects in the area of quality assurance.
Thomas Peither studied Mechanical Engineering at the TUM from 1984 to 1990 with a focus on Manufacturing and Operating Technology. From 1990 to 1993 he worked for the company Stihl in Waiblingen in the area of assembly development, managing a project that introduced the continuous improvement process there in line with Kaizen ideas. In 1994 he joined a small management consultancy in Düsseldorf and worked his way into the field of quality assurance in the pharmaceutical industry (GMP = Good Manufacturing Practice). The topic has always stayed with him. Working on countless industrial projects, he developed to become a a GMP expert and initially went freelance in 1998.
In 1999, Barbara and Thomas Peither, founded the publishing company “Maas & Peither GMP-Verlag” together with Anita Maas in the Basel pharmaceutical region. Due to the early digitalization of many processes and products, which was driven by the two engineers, the publishing house today generates two thirds of its turnover with digital products. This year, the globally operating publishing house celebrates its 20th anniversary and employs more than 20 people. Barbara and Thomas Peither have three children.