To mark the 30th anni­ver­sa­ry of Ralf Hoh­mann, one of our lon­gest-ser­ving and most expe­ri­en­ced pro­ject mana­gers at ORISA, we took the oppor­tu­ni­ty to talk to him about his impres­si­ve 30-year care­er. He shared not only pro­fes­sio­nal high­lights, but also char­ming mis­ad­ven­tures and uni­que moments from three deca­des. His memo­ries pro­vi­de an insight into a varied care­er as a pro­gramm­er and pro­ject mana­ger — and show how much humor, pas­si­on, and inno­va­ti­ve spi­rit have been at the heart of Ralf’s work.

On Sep­tem­ber 1, 1994, Ralf star­ted his first working day at the for­mer com­pa­ny focal — now ORISA, which was still based at Kraut­gas­se 2 at the time — with employee ID num­ber 9 after com­ple­ting his mathe­ma­tics degree.

It was alre­a­dy clear at his job inter­view that Ralf and the com­pa­ny were a good match. “I’ve always found cross-bor­der things inte­res­t­ing,” he says with a laugh. And this curio­si­ty has never left him in the last few deca­des — nor has the joy of sol­ving pro­blems, even if it has­n’t always been wit­hout inci­dent.

From total breakdown to math miracle: Ralf’s early adventures in IT

In his ear­ly years at ORISA, Ralf pro­vi­ded an unfor­gettable moment at Carl Zeiss Jena GmbH — and cau­sed some asto­nis­hed faces among the tech­no­lo­gists the­re. His task was to install an update for the tool manage­ment sys­tem — at the time still on flop­py disk and deli­ver­ed per­so­nal­ly in an appro­pria­te­ly old-school man­ner. But ins­tead of a simp­le update, he had mista­ken­ly brought the crea­ti­on script, which by default starts by dele­ting pre­vious tables. Within a few seconds, the enti­re depart­ment came to a standstill. “Sud­den­ly the­re was a total break­down,” he recalls with a smi­le today. For­t­u­na­te­ly, a back­up was available, and Ralf has sin­ce lear­ned to dou­ble-check befo­re going live.

During a pro­ject for a bank, Ralf stumb­led across a real curio­si­ty: when he dis­co­ver­ed that the ori­gi­nal soft­ware could divi­de by zero and actual­ly spit out the value “1”, it was clear that some­thing was wrong. In nor­mal pro­grams, divi­ding by zero typi­cal­ly results in a crash, not a mathe­ma­ti­cal mira­cle. So a divi­si­on ope­ra­tor had to be pro­grammed to repro­du­ce exact­ly this error in order to run the ban­king soft­ware cor­rect­ly. Some­ti­mes in IT, you have to make the impos­si­ble pos­si­ble — even if it doesn’t make mathe­ma­ti­cal sen­se.

From an intimate breakfast circle to a summer party in the garden

Even though the com­pa­ny has grown nine­fold (wri­te out the num­ber) sin­ce Ralf’s ear­ly days and the cor­po­ra­te cul­tu­re has had to adapt accor­din­gly, Ralf likes to talk about the clo­se bond within the team. In the ear­ly years, the col­le­gi­al rela­ti­onship was clo­se — almost fami­li­al. Sum­mer par­ties were held in his gar­den — initi­al­ly star­ted by chan­ce — whe­re, as he recalls with a smi­le, some­ti­mes for­ty adults and ten child­ren would jump through the gar­den.

For him, the clo­se team spi­rit is still one of the reasons why he has remain­ed loy­al to the com­pa­ny for so many years. “Even though we now have almost 70 employees, you can still feel this team spi­rit. And that’s what makes the dif­fe­rence for me.”

Siemens: the most important relationship and the greatest success

Ralf’s care­er at ORISA is clo­se­ly lin­ked to the cus­to­mer Sie­mens Switz­er­land. He star­ted working on the pro­ject back in 2006, and the first online ver­si­on of the HIT pro­gram went live in 2008.
A pro­mo­tio­nal “how-to” video was even pro­du­ced for the off­line ver­si­on, in which the tool took cen­ter stage. “That was a gre­at moment,” he recalls proud­ly. Ralf has now imple­men­ted almost 20 pro­jects with Sie­mens and main­ta­ins a clo­se rela­ti­onship with this cus­to­mer. “The big­gest com­pli­ment is when the cus­to­mer keeps coming back to you. It shows that the­re is mutu­al app­re­cia­ti­on and trust.”

Technological change: from floppy disks to cloud solutions

Tech­no­lo­gy has also chan­ged mas­si­ve­ly over the last 30 years. “We used to have one com­pu­ter that we all had to share in order to access the inter­net,” Ralf recalls with a laugh.
Today, of cour­se, soft­ware deve­lo­p­ment is very dif­fe­rent: “A lot of things have beco­me more con­ve­ni­ent, but some things, such as secu­ri­ty requi­re­ments, also make the work more com­plex.” He com­pa­res the soft­ware indus­try to the fashion world — trends come and go, but at the core, many things remain the same.

The secret of his motivation: enjoying his job

And what keeps Ralf moti­va­ted after 30 years? “I sim­ply enjoy it,” he says sim­ply. Working with cus­to­mers, the chall­enge of sol­ving their pro­blems, and, of cour­se, his team — that’s what dri­ves him. “I get on with some col­le­agues like an old mar­ried cou­ple. We can com­mu­ni­ca­te in half sen­ten­ces and are con­stant­ly lear­ning from each other.” This mix of fun and cama­ra­de­rie keeps him going.

The varied tasks also mean that working at ORISA is never bor­ing. Sup­port­ing pro­jects in a wide ran­ge of indus­tries and lear­ning com­ple­te­ly new things in the pro­cess are still a big plus point of his work for Ralf. “What I like about it is that you pick up a bit of know­ledge whe­re­ver you go. Now I can even read basic hydrau­lic cir­cuit dia­grams and, thanks to ano­ther pro­ject in the field of rail vehic­le con­s­truc­tion, I’ve lear­ned what a zig­zag width is,” he says with a wink.

Advice for the next generation

Ralf has clear advice for young col­le­agues: “Do what you enjoy.” For him, pro­gramming has always been more than just a job. “For me, pro­gramming is an art. The only limit is logic — and as long as some­thing doesn’t con­tra­dict logic, you can pro­gram it.” He sees this crea­ti­ve free­dom as the grea­test strength of his work. In con­clu­si­on, Ralf explains that the key to his 30-year care­er is simp­le: “Having fun for 30 years. If you do what you love, you don’t even noti­ce how time flies.”

In Ralf, we have a col­le­ague who is not only a wal­king ency­clo­paed­ia of tech­ni­cal solu­ti­ons, but who also remains an important part of the ORISA fami­ly. Whe­ther divi­ding by 0 or flop­py disk glit­ches — his anec­do­tes show that in 30 years you not only grow, but also laugh a lot tog­e­ther.