Principal Digital IC Design Engineer

Segensworth
3 days ago
Create job alert

Principal Digital IC Design Engineer
Location: Fareham, Hampshire (Hybrid Working Available)
Salary: £87,000 + bonus
Contract: Permanent
Visa Sponsorship is available

We’re recruiting for a Principal Digital IC Design Engineer on behalf of a high-growth semiconductor organisation operating at the forefront of advanced electronics. This is a senior individual contributor role, ideal for a recognised technical expert who wants to drive digital IC innovation while influencing architecture, methodology and best practice across complex ASIC and MCU developments.

You’ll play a key role in shaping next-generation digital designs used in safety-critical and high-performance applications, working across multidisciplinary and global engineering teams.

The Role
This position focuses on technical leadership across digital IC development, from architecture definition through to silicon validation.

As a Principal Engineer, you’ll provide deep technical expertise, guide design decisions, and act as a key contributor to complex projects, while mentoring engineers and influencing engineering standards across the organisation.

Key Responsibilities

Define and influence digital architecture based on system and product requirements
Lead complex digital design, implementation, verification and validation activities
Drive performance, power and area optimisation across ASIC and MCU designs
Act as a technical authority for digital IC design methodologies and best practices
Contribute to and review RTL design, verification strategies and sign-off processes
Support IP development, integration and evaluation of third-party IP
Collaborate closely with analogue, software, systems and backend teams globally
Provide technical mentorship and guidance to engineers across the team
Support silicon bring-up, debug, validation and failure analysis
Contribute to EDA tool evaluation and continuous improvement of design flows Knowledge, Skills & Experience
Essential:

Degree-qualified (BEng/MEng) in Electronics, Engineering or related discipline
Significant experience in digital or mixed-signal IC design (ASIC preferred)
Strong expertise across the full digital IC design lifecycle (specification to silicon)
Proven track record of delivering complex digital ICs or subsystems
Deep understanding of RTL design, verification methodologies and timing closure
Experience with low-power design techniques and optimisation
Strong knowledge of EDA tools and digital design flows
Experience in silicon debug and validation
Excellent problem-solving skills and ability to influence technical decisions Desirable:

Exposure to mixed-signal environments
Familiarity with full ASIC front-end and back-end flows
Knowledge of IP integration and lifecycle management
Scripting/automation experience (e.g. Python)
Experience with tools such as JIRA and Confluence Why Apply?

Salary of £87,000 plus annual bonus
Flexible hybrid working (typically 3 days on-site in Fareham)
Senior technical role with significant influence on product architecture
Opportunity to work on cutting-edge semiconductor technologies
Collaborative, innovation-driven engineering environment
Strong benefits package including pension, private medical and dental cover
Clear progression path within a growing semiconductor organisation
Visa Sponsorship available For more information or to apply, contact:
Lewis Phillips
(phone number removed)
(url removed)

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Principal Process Engineer

Principal Process Engineer

Principal Process Engineer (Wastewater)

Process Engineer

Process Engineer

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 Many Semiconductor Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Semiconductor Job?

If you’re pursuing a career in the semiconductor industry, it can feel like you’re expected to master an endless list of tools, software packages and lab equipment before you even submit a CV. One job advert wants experience with TCAD and process simulation, another mentions SPICE and yield tools, while yet another asks for test automation platforms, yield analysis software, hardware description languages, EDA suites and hundreds of others. With so many technical names thrown around, it’s easy to fall into “tool anxiety” — the feeling that you’re behind because you don’t know every piece of software, every lab instrument and every process control suite. Here’s the honest truth most semiconductor hiring managers won’t say out loud: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every tool — they hire you because you can use the right tools to solve real engineering problems and explain your reasoning clearly. Tools matter, absolutely. But they exist to help you deliver measurable results — not to be collected like badges. So how many semiconductor tools do you actually need to know to get a job? The answer is a lot fewer than you might think — and far more focused on core capabilities than a long checklist. This guide breaks down what employers really value, which tools are essential, which are role-specific, and how to focus your learning so you are confident and credible.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Semiconductor Job Applications (UK Guide)

The semiconductor industry is fast-moving, highly technical and critically important to modern technology. Whether you’re targeting roles in device design, process engineering, yield improvement, test and validation, equipment engineering, reliability, failure analysis or fab operations, hiring managers are selective and deliberate in how they review applications. Most candidates still make the same mistake: they throw generic skill lists and duty statements at recruiters and hope it sticks. In reality, hiring managers make an early call — often within the first 10–20 seconds — based on a few key signals that tell them whether you’re a credible, relevant, impactful candidate. This article breaks down exactly what hiring managers look for first in semiconductor job applications — how they scan your CV, portfolio and cover letter, what makes them read deeper, and what causes strong candidates to be passed over in favour of others.

The Skills Gap in Semiconductor Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

The semiconductor industry lies at the heart of modern technology. From smartphones and data centres to autonomous vehicles, medical devices and defence systems, semiconductors power the digital age. The UK is investing heavily in semiconductor research, fabrication and talent development as part of its industrial strategy — yet employers continue to report a persistent problem: Many graduates are not job-ready for semiconductor roles. Despite strong academic programmes in engineering, physics and materials science, there remains a tangible skills gap between what universities teach and what semiconductor employers actually need. This article explores that gap in depth: what universities do well, where there are consistent shortfalls, why the divide persists, what employers genuinely want, and how jobseekers can bridge the gap to build successful careers in the semiconductor sector.