Curated reading on battery, charging, motor, software, and the people making electric mobility happen.
India's battery-recycling industry has gone from invisible to a serious hiring engine in 24 months. Here's the company landscape, role types, salary bands and the credentialing that wins offers.
by Avinash Singh
If you're applying for a B.Tech / M.Tech EV internship, these are the questions that decide outcomes. Technical + behavioural patterns + how to prep in 2 weeks.
by Avinash Singh
Indian gigafactories are paying PhD cell scientists at globally-competitive bands. Here's the 2026 breakdown by experience, top employers and the typical research-to-production progression.
by Avinash Singh
Cell sourcing, motor-magnet procurement, raw-material contracts and Tier-2 supplier management are central to every Indian EV OEM. Here's the supply-chain + procurement career roadmap.
by Avinash Singh
Product management at Indian EV OEMs and charging operators is one of the fastest-rising career tracks — here's the role landscape, salary bands and the credible transition paths from IT / consumer-startup backgrounds.
by Avinash Singh
Chemical engineers are the most under-supplied talent in India's EV-cell push. Here are the roles, salary bands, the gigafactory hiring map and the skill ladder that lands offers.
by Avinash Singh
Most battery courses skip the things that actually matter on the job. Here's the curriculum checklist that separates serious programs from box-ticking ones.
by Avinash Singh
An overview of DIYguru's flagship EV certifications — curriculum, duration, placement outcomes and how to enrol.
by Avinash Singh
The 15 most-hired EV industry skills in 2026 — from battery chemistry to OCPP firmware to ISO 26262. Pick 2-3 and go deep.
by Avinash Singh
From ARAI to BHEL to state DISCOMs, the public sector has its own EV hiring market. Here are the agencies, the roles and how to apply.
by Avinash Singh
A practical 90-day roadmap to land your first EV-industry role — pick a track, skill up, build a portfolio and apply right.
by Avinash Singh