GM's youth design program helps recruit fresh blood

General Motors’ investment in metro Detroit has a tendency to yield great returns — particularly when it comes to finding and attracting talent to the automotive industry. While pursuing an engineering career at a Detroit automaker may be obvious for Michigan students, finding burgeoning artists who see carmaking as a career path isn’t nearly as clear.

Melinda Gray, GM Design’s outreach and development manager, points to Young Modelers and Designers — a 20-year-old program — as a key method of attracting artistically minded students to the industry.

“Most of what we do is centered around creating larger awareness, not just for our targeted audience, but also for their parents and educators,” she said. “Sometimes that proves to be a barrier — not realizing the full breadth of opportunities that exist for creatives at General Motors, but that it’s lucrative as well.”

Melinda Gray, GM Design’s outreach and development manager, at the GM Technical Center in Warren on Thursday, March 20, 2025.
Melinda Gray, GM Design’s outreach and development manager, at the GM Technical Center in Warren on Thursday, March 20, 2025.

The youth design program concluded its 20th 11-week automotive design and sculpting course last month for seventh- to 12th-grade students. Even after two decades, the program is more important than ever when it comes to encouraging young creators to consider a career in automotive design rather than fine arts, film or video game development.

Those accepted get the chance to learn the first steps to vehicle development under GM Design professionals. This includes honing their sketching skills, as well as digital and clay sculpting and the application of automotive color, material and finish.

Young Modelers and Designers had 18 virtual students this year as well as 30 in person, but four students joined the program through the company’s smaller sister studio in Pasadena, California, close to one of the art schools from which GM often recruits, according to Gray.

Facing a decline in design-college enrollment

The program is among many Global Design Center offers that support recruitment to the industry. Another new development to the program this year included a partnership with the Northville Concours, a youth-run organization with the goal of supporting future competitive automotive judges. Three students in the GM design program were selected to participate in a poster design challenge as a part of that collaboration. The winning design will be unveiled at the Northville Concours Founder’s Day Dinner on May 3, which GM also sponsors.

Gray, who has worked at GM for nearly 30 years, noted that her current directives fall under four pillars: pre-collegiate outreach, college level, internal development for early hires and community outreach.

“We’re seeing a decline in college enrollment overall, but particularly in our design colleges. There’s just a handful here in the U.S.,” she said, adding that those schools include the Art Center in Pasadena, the Academy of Art University in San Francisco and the Pratt Institute in New York. “We’re really sensitive about protecting that pipeline and we recognize that starts way before you’re in high school.”