Manufacturing Process Engineer (NPI Projects)

Greenwich
3 days ago
Create job alert

Manufacturing Process Engineer (NPI Projects) -

London (Greenwich) | £42 to £47.50 per hour (Umbrella) | Long-Term Contract

About the Role
We're looking for a Manufacturing Process Engineer to help shape the future of assembly processes. In this role, you'll design and implement lean improvements that make production safer, more efficient, and more sustainable. You'll work closely with R&D, support projects from concept through to delivery, and ensure processes meet the highest standards of quality and compliance.

What's in it for you?
Competitive pay and a secure long-term contract
A collaborative and supportive team culture
The chance to make a real impact on products that support critical global infrastructure
Work with cutting-edge technologies that are making a difference worldwide

What you'll be doing
Design & Improve: Create lean process improvements for tools, equipment, and assembly methods
Deliver Change: Manage projects from concept to handover, keeping efficiency and timelines on track
Validate & Test: Ensure new tooling and processes are reliable and compliant before production
Keep it Safe: Lead PUWER assessments, risk analysis, and safety compliance
Collaborate: Partner with R&D, training schools, and wider teams to support innovation and development
Measure & Monitor: Define KPIs, track progress, and ensure budgets and quality targets are met

What we're looking for
A degree in Mechanical, Industrial, Production, or related Engineering field
Hands-on experience in manufacturing or technical environments
Knowledge of ISO9001/TL9000, Lean, Six Sigma, and regulated industries
A methodical problem-solver with excellent organisational skills
Willingness to learn systems such as SAP and sDMS

How to apply
If this sounds like the right role for you, we'd love to hear from you. Please apply and submit your CV for review

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Manufacturing Process Engineer

Manufacturing Process Engineer

Manufacturing Process Engineer

Manufacturing Process Engineer

Manufacturing Process Engineer (NPI Projects)

Process Engineer

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

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

How to Write a Semiconductor Job Ad That Attracts the Right People

Semiconductors sit at the heart of modern technology. From consumer electronics and automotive systems to AI, defence, telecoms and advanced manufacturing, semiconductor professionals play a critical role in designing, fabricating and testing the components that power the global economy. Yet many employers struggle to attract the right candidates. Semiconductor job adverts often receive either very few applications or a high volume of unsuitable ones. Experienced engineers and scientists frequently ignore adverts that feel vague, generic or disconnected from the realities of semiconductor development and manufacturing. In most cases, the issue is not a shortage of talent — it is the clarity and quality of the job advert. Semiconductor professionals are detail-oriented, process-driven and highly selective. A poorly written job ad signals weak technical understanding and unclear expectations. A well-written one signals credibility, precision and long-term intent. This guide explains how to write a semiconductor job ad that attracts the right people, improves applicant quality and strengthens your employer brand.

Maths for Semiconductor Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

If you are aiming for semiconductor jobs in the UK it is easy to assume you need a PhD level maths toolkit. In practice most roles do not. Whether you are targeting device engineering, process engineering, yield engineering, product engineering, test, reliability, RF, analogue, digital design, EDA, packaging or applications engineering, the maths you actually use clusters into a few workhorse areas. This guide strips it back to the topics that genuinely help you get hired & perform well on the job: Exponents, logs & “physics curves” (Arrhenius style behaviour, subthreshold, leakage) Calculus in plain English (rates, gradients, differential equations intuition) Device electrostatics & transport basics (Poisson equation intuition, drift & diffusion) Complex numbers for AC & RF (impedance, phasors, frequency response) Signals maths (Fourier intuition, bandwidth, noise density) Probability & statistics for manufacturing (SPC, DOE, yield models, reliability basics) Basic optimisation habits (fitting models, tuning trade-offs, making decisions with data) You will also get a 6 week plan, portfolio projects & a resources section you can follow without getting pulled into unnecessary theory.

Neurodiversity in Semiconductor Careers: Turning Different Thinking into a Superpower

Semiconductors sit quietly at the heart of everything: phones, cars, medical devices, satellites, data centres & everyday appliances. Behind every chip are people designing circuits, running fabs, testing wafers, modelling devices & solving problems most users never see. Those people are not all “textbook” engineers – & that’s a good thing. If you’re neurodivergent (for example living with ADHD, autism or dyslexia), you may have been told your brain is “too distracted”, “too literal” or “too disorganised” for a high-precision, high-reliability industry. In reality, many of the traits that made school or traditional offices hard can be huge strengths in semiconductor work: intense focus on detail, pattern-spotting in test data, creative thinking around yield & process issues. This guide is written for semiconductor job seekers in the UK. We’ll cover: What neurodiversity means in a semiconductor context How ADHD, autism & dyslexia strengths map to chip & fab roles Workplace adjustments you can ask for under UK law How to talk about your neurodivergence in applications & interviews By the end, you should have a clearer sense of where you might thrive in the semiconductor industry – & how to turn “different thinking” into a genuine career advantage.