Operations
/ Manufacturing
This
category of engineer is very similar to the
support and service engineer discussed earlier.
The difference is that in this case, their
customers are internal rather than external.
Most
of these engineers will be employed in factories.
Operations engineers can be divided into
the following categories:
- Maintenance – keeping
machines running
- Production – keeping
production lines running.
- Process – keeping
manufacturing processes optimized
- Procurement – supporting
suppliers to ensure delivery and quality.
- Quality – maintaining
and improving the company’s quality
system to assure product quality and regulatory
standards compliance
The
list of possible iterations on the job of
the engineer in operations is a long one
and the above show a sample of the most common
categories.
In
general, we can say that the operations engineer’s
job is to keep a manufacturing process in
a factory to be as optimized as possible.
To be sure, it is not correct to assume that
all this is sustaining work. On the contrary.
In this environment, the engineer is challenged
with a non-ending list of opportunities to
work on. I would say that this is one job
category where the number of possible projects
that an engineer can work on will far exceed
the capacity to do them.
The
ability to prioritize them based on technology,
cost, impact, risk, quality etc will need
to be made at this level.
An
operations engineer in general is not a specialist.
They are responsible for technologies that
are very diverse, as you can expect in a
factory. They are generalists, with the ability
to integrate different technologies and management
tools to address issues. They will need to
have sufficient depth of knowledge to maintain
the operation while at the same time, have
the ability to formulate integrated technical
initiatives to address a wide array of problems.
The engineer may not be a specialist, but
will need to have the ability to source other
specialists and deploy them to be part of
the solution team.
To
be sure, this is not an easy task by any
measure. As a career path, this is a good
starting point towards a project leadership
or management career. On the engineering
path, this job will prepare the engineer
for almost any other job categories in the
market.
Here
are some key successful characteristics for
an operations engineer:
- A
generalist – knows many technologies
and have the ability to integrate them
to solve problems
- Leadership – ability
to identify opportunities for improvement
and source skills to help address them.
- Networking – among
peers in other fields and suppliers.
- Problem
solver – an analytical mind that
can design and work with statistical data
to reach conclusions.
- Operations
tools – statistics, quality, design
of experiments, measurement.
- Influence – ability
to influence others to support ideas and
initiatives.
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