Professional Community Investment Yields Big Returns
March 12, 2026
Volunteering broadens perspectives and develops leadership skills
Lokesh Lagudu is a senior engineering manager at Walmart Global Tech in Sunnyvale, Calif.

Engineering is so much more than solving problems or writing efficient code. It is about creating solutions that affect billions of lives and contributing to a profession built on innovation, responsibility, and collaboration. Although technical skills remain critical, what truly will accelerate the growth of the next generation of engineers is community and professional involvement.
Learning from communities
University programs provide a strong foundation in theory and practice, but they cannot capture the complexity of real-world engineering. As an IEEE senior member, I believe professional communities such as IEEE can help bridge the gap by offering:
- Practical experience through hackathons, open-source projects, and collaborative research.
- Exposure to diverse perspectives, with young engineers learning from peers across industries and cultures.
- Mentorship opportunities that accelerate career growth and instill professional values early.
I have served as a mentor and judge for a variety of hackathons across different age groups, including high school competitions United Hacks and NextStep Hacks, as well as graduate-level events such as HackHarvard.
The experiences demonstrate how transformative community-driven opportunities can be for young engineers. They provide exposure to teamwork, innovation, and the realities of solving problems at scale.
The power of mentorship
Engineers don’t develop skills in isolation. Mentorship, whether formal or informal, plays a pivotal role in shaping careers. Senior professionals who invest in guiding students and early-career engineers pass on more than technical knowledge. They share decision-making approaches, ethical considerations, and strategies for navigating careers, thereby expanding the engineering field.
As a keynote speaker at conferences, I have seen how sharing real-world experiences can ignite students’ curiosity and confidence. What they often value most is not a lecture on technology but candid insights into how to be resilient, grow their career, and learn about the different engineering paths.
Building ethical awareness
With the rise of artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and other high-impact innovations, engineers’ ethical responsibilities are more important than ever. Professional organizations such as IEEE and ACM emphasize codes of ethics and standards to help ensure that technology is developed responsibly.
Through my work as a peer reviewer and committee member for IEEE and ACM conferences, including those at the university level, I have seen how the organizations promote rigor and accountability.
When students engage with such communities early, they can not only expand their technical knowledge but also build an understanding of responsible innovation.
Networking as a catalyst for innovation
Engineering breakthroughs often emerge at the intersections of different fields. Professional communities create the space for such interactions. A student working on computer vision, for example, might discover health care applications by collaborating with biomedical engineers.
While reviewing papers for conferences, I have seen how interdisciplinary ideas spark promising innovations.
I bring the same perspective to my role as an IEEE Collabratec mentor, connecting with innovators across different disciplines and industries.
“When we invest in the community, we invest in the future of engineering.”
By collaborating on projects and expanding your reach, you can find the mentors or partners you need to inspire your next breakthrough.
Participating in forums allows students and professionals alike to broaden their horizons and explore solutions that go beyond traditional boundaries.
Giving back shapes leadership
Community involvement is not only about what you gain. It is also about what you give. Engineers who volunteer for educational programs, STEM initiatives, and professional committees can develop leadership skills that extend beyond technical expertise. They can learn to inspire, organize, and guide others.
Judging hackathons and mentoring student teams reminds me that leadership often begins with service. When experienced professionals actively invest in the growth of others, they help create a culture wherein learning and leadership are passed forward.
Preparing for a lifelong journey
Learning how to be an engineer doesn’t end when you earn your degree. It is a lifelong journey of learning, adapting, and contributing. By engaging with communities and professional networks early, students and graduates can develop habits that serve them throughout their career. They can stay current with emerging trends, build trusted professional relationships, and gain resilience through shared challenges.
Community involvement can transform engineers from problem-solvers into change agents.
Investing in the community
The future of engineering depends not only on technological advancement but also on the collective strength of its communities. By fostering mentorship, encouraging collaboration, and embedding ethical responsibility, professional and community involvement can ensure that the next generation of engineers is prepared to meet tomorrow’s challenges with competence and character.
My journey as a mentor, judge, keynote speaker, and peer reviewer has reinforced a clear truth: When we invest in the community, we invest in the future of engineering. The students and young professionals we support today will be the ones building the world we live in tomorrow.
- Why I Admire Walt Downing’s Volunteerism ›
- 5 Ways Volunteering Can Be a Springboard for Professional Growth ›
- Advice on Leading and Mentoring for Greater Innovation ›
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