Hyundai Motor Group Says Real-World AI Integration Attracts Silicon Valley Engineers
Hyundai Motor Group is using its HMG Tech Talent Forum to pitch engineers on the chance to deploy AI in physical systems, from vehicles to city-scale infrastructure.
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What Happened
Hyundai Motor Group is hosting its first HMG Tech Talent Forum 2026 in San Jose, bringing together affiliates like Kia, Boston Dynamics, and Motional to recruit engineers. CHRO Hae In Kim emphasizes that the Group's advantage lies in its ability to deploy AI in real-world industrial environments, not just in simulations.
“AI makes decisions, moves physical devices, generates data, and then uses that data to improve the model again. That loop is extremely important.”
The Group's Saemangeum project in South Korea exemplifies this approach, combining an AI data center, robot manufacturing, hydrogen production, and solar power in one site scheduled for completion by 2029.
- Perspective: understanding how one's technology fits into the larger system
- Collaboration: working across disciplines to integrate complex systems
- Challenge: willingness to tackle real-world problems without predetermined answers
Why this matters
As AI moves from software to physical environments, Hyundai Motor Group argues that its integrated ecosystem offers engineers unique opportunities to see their work have real-world impact, attracting top talent away from pure tech firms.
Terms in This Story
- Physical AI
- AI systems that interact with the physical world, e.g., in robots, vehicles, and factories.
- PEM water electrolysis
- A method of producing hydrogen by using electricity to split water, using a Proton Exchange Membrane.
- Edge data
- Data collected from sensors on devices at the 'edge' of a network, like vehicles or robots, used to improve AI models.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.