Process Engineering Technician

Recruitment Solutions (Folkestone) Ltd
Folkestone, Kent, United Kingdom
Yesterday
Job Type
Temporary
Work Pattern
Part-time
Work Location
On-site
Seniority
Mid
Education
Degree
Posted
29 May 2026 (Yesterday)

Process Engineer – Temporary Opportunity

Folkestone

Monday to Thursday: 8:00am – 4:30pm | Friday: 8:00am – 3:30pm

Immediate Start Available

We’re recruiting for a temporary Process Engineer role within a busy manufacturing environment in Folkestone.

This is a hands-on opportunity to support production processes, assist with continuous improvement activities, and work alongside experienced engineering and manufacturing teams.

The Role

Reporting to the Senior Process Engineer, responsibilities will include:

* Supporting process development and production activities

* Assisting with continuous improvement projects

* Helping maintain safe, efficient and compliant manufacturing processes

* Investigating and resolving process-related issues

* Working closely with production, quality and engineering teams

* Supporting validation and GMP activities where required

What We’re Looking For

* Degree or qualification in an engineering-related subject

* Around 2 years’ manufacturing or engineering experience

* Understanding of manufacturing processes and continuous improvement

* Good problem-solving and communication skills

* Organised and able to manage workload effectively

* Positive, flexible approach to work

* Ability to work independently and as part of a team

What’s Offered

* Immediate start available

* Ongoing temporary assignment

* Early finish on Fridays

* Experience within a professional manufacturing environment

* Opportunity to build process engineering experience

If you’re looking to develop your engineering experience in a supportive manufacturing setting, we’d like to hear from you

Related Jobs

View all jobs
Spotlight

Semiconductor Test Engineering Team Leader

Fractile Bristol, United Kingdom
On-site
Spotlight

Senior Processor Architect

Fractile London, United Kingdom

PROCESS ENGINEER

McCormick UK Peterborough, PE1 1XH, United Kingdom

Equipment Engineer (Photolithography/Bake)

Pragmatic Semiconductor Durham, DH7 8RJ, United Kingdom
On-site

Hardware System Test Engineer

Fractile Bristol, United Kingdom
On-site

Senior Test Engineer

Teledyne FLIR St Asaph, Cymru / Wales, LL17 0RF, United Kingdom
On-site

Technical Director - Clean Water Process Engineering

Matchtech Birmingham, United Kingdom

Process Engineer (chemical engineering)

Adecco Grangemouth, Stirling And Falkirk, United Kingdom

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Where to Advertise Semiconductor Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Where to advertise semiconductor jobs UK in 2026: the specialist boards, academic channels and community routes that actually reach IC, fab and EDA talent. The candidate pool is one of the smallest and most specialised in any engineering discipline — spanning IC design engineers, process engineers, fab technicians, EDA tool developers, compound semiconductor physicists and power electronics specialists. General job boards are largely ineffective for semiconductor hiring. The community is tight-knit, highly academic in its roots and concentrated around a small number of university groups, fab facilities and design centres. Specialist boards, academic channels and direct community engagement are the primary sourcing strategies that work. This guide, published by SemiconductorJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise semiconductor roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about hiring across different role types.

Semiconductor Jobs UK 2026: What to Expect Over the Next 3 Years

Semiconductor Jobs UK 2026: roles, salaries and the hiring trends shaping UK semiconductor recruitment over the next three years — what to expect now. Semiconductors are the foundational technology of the modern world. Every smartphone, electric vehicle, data centre, medical device, satellite, and AI accelerator depends on them. And yet for much of the past decade, the strategic importance of semiconductor design and manufacturing was something that governments, investors, and employers took largely for granted — until supply chain crises, geopolitical tensions, and the insatiable compute demands of artificial intelligence made the vulnerability of global semiconductor supply chains impossible to ignore. The response has been significant and sustained. The UK's National Semiconductor Strategy, the US CHIPS Act, the EU Chips Act, and parallel investment programmes across Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan have collectively committed hundreds of billions of pounds to semiconductor research, design, and manufacturing capability. In the UK specifically, that investment is beginning to translate into real hiring — across compound semiconductor manufacturing, chip design, semiconductor equipment, advanced packaging, and the growing ecosystem of fabless design companies that are choosing Britain as their base. For job seekers, the semiconductor jobs market of 2026 represents an opportunity that is more commercially urgent, more geographically distributed, and more technically diverse than at any previous point in the sector's UK history. The roles being created span the full semiconductor value chain — from fundamental materials research and process engineering through chip design, verification, and the software that makes silicon useful. The candidates who will thrive over the next three years are those who understand where that value chain is being built, which technical areas are attracting the most investment, and how to position their skills at the intersection of the sector's greatest needs. This article breaks down what the UK semiconductor jobs market is likely to look like through to 2028 — covering the titles emerging right now, the technologies driving employer demand, the skills that will matter most, and how to position your career at the leading edge of one of the most strategically important technology sectors in the UK economy.