Career
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We are constantly on the lookout for talented engineers ready to boost and support the development of technology in Sweden.
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Meet some of our brilliant employees and consultants and learn about their success stories.
Karime Esparza
Meet Karime, a natural leader and hardworking full-stack developer turned system architect at MT3. Joining the company in 2020, she now spearheads software engineering for a prominent unicorn in sustainable clean energy.
Karime’s journey from northern Mexico began with a passion for investigation. Initially drawn to engineering in computational systems, she evolved from developing applications for a small library to excelling in software development.
MT3’s mission to empower Mexican talent and foster diversity convinced her to choose Sweden over Canada. Adjusting to the cultural differences was initially challenging for her, but it was just a matter of time before she learnt how to fit in. “This is the essence of Mexican dynamics,” she says to explain this innate ability of Mexican culture, “for life is short and unpredictable.”
“Sweden feels like something that had to happen,” she says. ”It has been an amazing journey, and for that I will always be grateful,” she beams. To her, MT3 is all about support, empathy and belonging.


Arturo Esquivel
Arturo, an embedded system engineer, defies engineering stereotypes with his kind and dynamic personality. Fluent in multiple languages, including programming languages, he joined MT3 in Sweden in 2018 alongside his partner, Viviana Levet.
He dreamt of becoming an inventor and creating new possibilities through technology, and he has always loved to learn. He studied Engineering in Digital Systems and Robotics, in which he was awarded as the best systems engineer of his generation at a national level, in one of the most prestigious colleges for engineering in Mexico.
”MT3 has been by far my best decision because of the intellectual challenge it implied, and the test of courage it represented” he says and acknowledges that leaving his country made him a more independent critical thinker; an apprentice of “how trust builds great teams, and great teams build great work”
Arturo has a clear theory on why Mexican engineers are unusually talented:
”Mexican engineers are of the best quality because they know how to adapt to any conditions. Call it weather, governments, or economic crises. It doesn’t matter how hard life hits us; we Mexicans will always find a way to laugh about it.”