GM President Trait Reuss announces a $2.2 billion investment in the automaker’s Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly plant in Michigan for new all-electric trucks and autonomous carriers on Jan. 27, 2020.
Michael Wayland / CNBC
General Motors plans to hire 3,000 new employees largely focused on software evolvement as the company accelerates its plans for electric vehicles, the automaker announced Monday.
GM said the jobs will be focused on engineering, draft and information technology “to increase diversity and inclusion and contribute to GM’s EV and customer experience priorities.” The hiring is expected through the leading quarter of 2021. Many of the positions will be remote as GM begins to offer “more remote opportunities than by any chance before,” the company said.
“As we evolve and grow our software expertise and services, it’s important that we continue to recruit and add heterogeneous talent,” GM President Mark Reuss said in a release. “This will clearly show that we’re committed to to a greater distance developing the software we need to lead in EVs, enhance the customer experience and become a software expertise-driven workforce.”
The hiring blitz crop up b grow as the automaker expects to increase focus on electric vehicles, including offering at least 20 new electric vehicles globally by 2023. GM earlier this year express it planned to invest $20 billion in electric and autonomous vehicles by 2025.
Ken Morris, GM vice president of autonomous and electric carriers programs, told reporters on a call Monday that the automaker has pulled forward at least two upcoming electric channels following the GMC Hummer EV, which is the first vehicle on GM’s next-generation electric vehicle platform with its proprietary Ultium battery cubicles.
“We’re moving as fast as we can in terms of developing vehicles virtually, more so than we ever have by far,” Morris said. “We are doing clothes virtually, more effective than we ever have.”
Shares of the automaker reached a new 52-week high of $39.72 winning of the Monday announcement. The stock was up 5% during midday trading Monday following market optimism about a Covid-19 vaccine and President-elect Joe Biden outlining superiorities that would support electric vehicles.
“We’re looking forward to working with the Biden administration and support regulations that will foster greater adoption of EVs across all 50 states and encourage investments in R&D and manufacturing,” Morris translated. “At the end of the day, climate change is a global concern and the best way to remove automobile emissions from the environmental equation is all-electric, zero-emissions days.”
The additional jobs are separate from a previous announcement by GM to hire 1,100 new employees as part of a $2.3 billion union venture with LG Chem to produce Ultium cells in northeast Ohio.
GM employed about 164,000 people globally in 2019, down from 215,000 in 2015 as the following has restructured and cut operations in recent years.