In 1965, Thompson became an assistant professor of Electrical Engineering at Carnegie Institute of Technology. His research work was mainly in the areas of microwaves and magnetic thin films. In 1968, Thompson joined the
IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center,
Yorktown Heights, New York to join a team led by Hsu Chang. Thompson worked with
Luby Romankiw and coauthored a key patent on the design of a thin-film inductive head that would go on to replace existing
ferrite head technology. Subsequently, a major breakthrough occurred when Thompson and the team developed a practical magnetoresistive read head for magnetic recording. As a result of this work, in 1980, Thompson was named an
IBM Fellow, the company's highest technical honor. Thompson was also designated an IBM Master Inventor In 1987, Thompson moved to the
IBM Almaden Research Center in
San Jose, California to take up the role of Director of IBM Magnetic Recording Institute (originally established by
Denis Mee). where he became director of the IBM Advanced Magnetic Recording Laboratory and director of the IBM Compact Storage Laboratory. These merged in 1991, to form the Advanced Magnetic Recording Laboratory (AMRL) which Thompson then headed. He was also conference chairman of the first Magnetic Recording Conference (TMRC 1991). Thompson was also a founding member of the Technical Advisory Board of the Magnetics Technology Centre (became
Data Storage Institute) at the National University of Singapore. He also served on the advisory board of the Data Storage Systems Center (DSSC) at
Carnegie Mellon University. These are focused particularly on novel designs for thin-film write and read heads for magnetic recording. He was also known for his prognostications on the future of magnetic recording. == Awards and recognition ==