Production Process Engineer

Clyst St Mary
3 days ago
Create job alert

Production Process Engineer

The Opportunity:
Working within the Production Engineering and Lean team, you will ensure successful identification and implementation of best manufacturing practise within this vibrant metalshop environment.  Your role as Production Process Engineer will be to focus on Process Improvement and Lean Production techniques in both existing manufacture and in NPD.  The Production Process Engineer will work as part of a well established team within this fabulous Exeter engineering firm.
 
The Opportunity:

Work as part of the production engineering team to share ideas and improve operation, recommending, supporting and implementing continuous improvement activities and process and procedure improvements to optimise results and improve quality of delivery, in line with quality standards requirements.
Identify and present ideas for improving production in order to improve profitability, Quality, Throughput or H&S.
Conduct feasibility studies on continuous improvement ideas generated from within Production, and having agreed the priority and gained necessary sign off, implement those projects.
Produce written reports and analyse data in order to identify areas for improvement.
Assist in the co-ordination and management of new products internally and externally to support the manufacturing team where required.Preferred Skills:

Minimum 2 years Engineering experience within a Process Engineer, Production / Manufacturing Engineer, or Continuous Improvement role.
HNC minimum in Mechanical Engineering.
Ideally experience within sheet metal manufacturing or a metalshop environment.
The ability to travel overseas from time to time would be highly appreciated in this role.Associated Benefits:
A competitive salary up to £45000
Company Pension Scheme, 5% contributory
Salary Sacrifice scheme.

Working Hours:
7.30-4.30 Mon to Thursday and 7.30-2 on a Friday

Meridian Business Support is a recruitment specialist acting on behalf of our client as an Employment Agency for this vacancy

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Production Process Engineer

Senior Production Process Engineer

Process Engineer

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.

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.

Semiconductor Jobs for Career Switchers in Their 30s, 40s & 50s (UK Reality Check)

Semiconductors sit behind almost everything: smartphones, EVs, medical devices, aerospace systems, telecoms networks, cloud data centres & the AI boom. In the UK, the semiconductor ecosystem spans chip design, IP, photonics, compound semiconductors, testing, packaging, equipment, supply chain & R&D. That breadth creates real opportunities for career switchers in their 30s, 40s & 50s, especially if you target roles where experience, process discipline & delivery skills matter as much as deep device physics. This article gives you a UK reality check: what semiconductor jobs actually look like, which roles are realistic for career switchers, what skills employers value, how long retraining tends to take & whether age is a barrier.