<br><br> Chennai, TN, India <br><br> Job ID: 49673 <br><br> About Role: Ingram Micro touches 80% of the technology you use every day with our focus on Technology Solutions, Cloud, and Commerce and Lifecycle Solutions. With $50 billion in revenue, we have become the world’s largest technology distributor with operations in 64 countries and more than 35,000 associates. <br><br> Position Summary: <br>- Designs, develops, tests, debugs and implements operating systems components, software tools, and utilities. <br>- Determines systems software design requirements. Ensures that system improvements are successfully implemented and monitored to increase efficiency. <br>- Generates systems software engineering policies, standards and procedures. What you bring to the role: Entry-level professional individual contributor on a project or work team. <br>- Work is closely supervised. Problems faced are not typically difficult or complex. <br>- Explains facts, policies and practices related to job area. Works on projects of limited scope and complexity. <br>- Follows standard practices and procedures in analyzing situations or data from which answers can be readily obtained. <br>- Uses company standard policies and procedures to resolve issues in which answers can be readily obtained. <br>- Work is reviewed regularly by supervisor or more senior peers. <br>- Requires broad theoretical knowledge typically acquired from advanced education. <br>- Typically requires a four year college degree or equivalent experience and 0-2 years functional experience. <br><br> *This is not a complete listing of the job duties. It’s a representation of the things you will be doing, and you may not perform all of these duties. <br><br> About Company: Ingram Micro is an American distributor of information technology products and services. The company is based in Irvine, California, U.S. and has operations around the world. Ingram Micro's origins trace back to the founding of distributor Micro D, Inc. in July 1979 by husband and wife team, Geza Czige and Lorraine Mecca, who were both teachers. The company started in Southern California and in its first year of business achieved approximately $3.5 million in sales. It rapidly expanded nationwide and held its public offering in 1983. Ingram Industries became a majority stockholder of Micro D in February 1986 when it acquired all of the common stock held by the company's founders, followed by the purchase of the remaining Micro D shares in March 1989. Meanwhile in 1982, just three years after the founding of Micro D, entrepreneurs Ronald Schreiber, Irwin Schreiber, Gerald Lippes and Paul Willax founded Software Distribution Services in Buffalo, N.Y. Ingram Distribution Group, a unit of the privately held Ingram Industries, acquired Software Distribution Services in the spring of 1985 and renamed it Ingram Software. Ingram Software expanded in December 1985 with the purchase of Softeam, a Compton, Calif.-based distributor. The operation was renamed Ingram Computer in February 1988. After acquiring the remaining publicly traded shares of Micro D in 1989, Ingram Industries merged these two former competitors to create the microcomputer industry's first $1 billion computer products wholesale distribution company, renaming it Ingram Micro D. The new company established headquarters in Santa Ana, Calif., and retained an East Coast operations center for sales, credit, technical support and customer service in Buffalo, N.Y. The “D” was dropped from the company's name in January 1991, creating Ingram Micro. In 1996, 17 years after the founding of Micro D, Ingram Micro once again became a public company, listing its shares on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). That year, the company’s revenues totaled more than $12 billion. In 1989 Ingram Micro, then called "Ingram Micro-D", was a subsidiary of the privately owned Ingram Industries group, took over the Belgian Softinvest and its three Softeurop subsidiaries active on the Belgian, the French and the Dutch markets from Brussels, Lille and Utrecht. This was Ingram's first foray outside the United States other than a few Ingram Industries subsidiaries. The company embarked on an active merge, acquisitions and foundation strategy in the European market.