Global Chip War Intensifies: Micron Woos Korean Engineers with Lucrative Offers, Up to 200 Million KRW Salary

Hwang Sujin Reporter

hwang075609@gmail.com | 2025-10-19 15:42:25


 

SEOUL – Micron Technology, the U.S.-based global third-largest memory semiconductor company, is aggressively ramping up its recruitment of experienced Korean engineers, a move widely seen as a direct challenge to its South Korean rivals, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, in the crucial High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) sector. The company's persistent talent acquisition strategy, which includes offering executive-level annual salaries potentially reaching up to 200 million Korean Won (approximately $147,000 USD, including bonuses), highlights the escalating global competition for semiconductor expertise, particularly in advanced packaging technologies critical for Artificial Intelligence (AI) chips.

Industry sources reveal that Micron is leveraging global professional platforms, such as LinkedIn, where local headhunters are actively contacting and proposing positions to semiconductor veterans from companies like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. The primary focus of this recruitment drive is to staff its major DRAM production and HBM manufacturing facility in Taichung, Taiwan, Micron’s largest D-RAM production base. The advertised positions are heavily concentrated in HBM and advanced packaging related fields, with some senior engineers reportedly receiving offers for executive roles.

This is not the first time Micron has aggressively courted Korean talent. Late last year, the company held in-person career interviews for Taiwanese-based positions at hotels in the Pangyo area of Gyeonggi Province, offering enticing conditions. These included salary increases of 10% to 20% over current wages (based on withholding tax), along with comprehensive support for housing and visa processing. Furthermore, Micron extended its reach to top Korean universities with unconventional "same-day hiring" recruitment sessions for pre-registered candidates, signaling an all-out effort to secure talent across all experience levels.

Micron’s aggressive recruitment reflects its strategic goal to rapidly expand its production capacity and gain a competitive edge in HBM, an area currently dominated by its Korean counterparts. Despite being the second company, after SK Hynix, to supply the AI behemoth Nvidia with HBM3E (fifth-generation) chips, Micron is currently playing catch-up in overall production capacity. The company is investing heavily in expanding its D-RAM and HBM production bases across global locations, including Taiwan, the U.S., Japan, and Singapore.

The push to secure Korean engineers, who possess superior expertise in D-RAM technology, is a calculated attempt by Micron to enhance its HBM competitiveness. Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra underscored the importance of this sector in a recent earnings announcement, projecting the HBM market to surge to a massive $100 billion valuation by 2030, with its growth rate significantly outpacing that of conventional D-RAM.

The recruitment efforts are not confined to core semiconductor engineers; offers have also reportedly been extended to employees of foreign semiconductor equipment manufacturers and display industry workers with a presence in Korea. Micron’s substantial offers and aggressive hiring tactics are a clear manifestation of the intensifying, high-stakes global talent war, as major chipmakers vie for the human capital necessary to lead the AI semiconductor revolution.

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