Very often, the two sectors of manufacturing and engineering are merged. While there is a close relationship between the two, engineering and manufacturing career paths differ considerably.
Manufacturing takes various forms, from bespoke, one-off, handmade items created by a skilled craftsperson, to large scale production using complex machinery or chemical processes.
A core concept to grasp in all forms of manufacturing is the idea of adding value. Each subsequent process adds value from the starting raw material or sub-assembly until the final, saleable item is created.
As such, every role within a manufacturing organisation plays a part in adding value to that product.
• Site Operations Management
• Production Management
• Manufacturing Management
• Quality Management
• Health & Safety Management
• Maintenance Management
It’s worth noting that all these disciplines are interrelated, and there are no clear lines of separation. The exact limits of each area’s scope of responsibility will be defined differently in every company. The following are the most usual, general outlines of each section.
The exact title will depend on the size of the business, and it may be that the company has people in one or all of those positions to spread the roles and responsibilities out across a senior site management team.
The Site or Operations Director takes responsibility for setting and implementing the overall strategy of the manufacturing plant. They then ensure that this strategy is cascaded down through the layers of management to the shop floor.
The team’s objective is to organise, plan, schedule, and coordinate all the production-related activities in the plant, i.e. producing the required quantity of parts to the customer’s specification for the requested due date.
Depending on the size of the business, the production management team will include the Production Manager, who may have an Assistant Production Manager or Shift Managers, then Team Leaders or Supervisors. Finally, production Operatives carry out the manufacturing processes on the shop floor.
A Manufacturing Manager will oversee Manufacturing Engineers and Technicians who will look at optimising the production processes. Core activities include optimising machines to reduce cycle times or carrying out continuous improvement exercises to improve overall efficiency.
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Due to their roles, the manufacturing management team interacts with several other departments, including design, engineering maintenance, production, and operations.
A newcomer to the manufacturing sector may think that quality management is solely about measuring and checking components. But that is only one small part of the overall quality management discipline.
At the top level, a Quality Director will create the overarching quality policy and quality management system (QMS) for the business, such as ISO9001. They then take the ultimate responsibility for ensuring the quality activities of the company conform to that standard through a process of auditing and refining the system. The quality management activities will be cascaded down through a team of quality managers, engineers, inspectors and technicians.
If the company works to a recognised H&S management system, such as ISO45001, the quality management team ensures continuous compliance with the standards laid out.
In the event of a breakdown, the maintenance team will carry out reactive work to repair the machine and bring it back to full production as soon as possible.
The team will be headed up by a maintenance manager, assisted by shift managers, engineers, and technicians.
Plant / Site Director | £82,000 - £133,000 |
Operations Director | £49,000 - £135,000 |
R&D Director | £62,000 - £95,000 |
Site / Plant Manager | £60,000 - £90,000 |
Operations Manager | £50,000 - £100,000 |
Production Manager | £35,000 - £70,000 |
Production Shift Manager | £38,000 - £50,000 |
Production Engineer | £35,000 - £53,000 |
Production Team Leader / Super. | £30,000 - £45,000 |
Production Controller/Coordinator | £26,000 - £38,000 |
Production Operative | £22,000 - £25,000 |
Head of Manufacturing | £60,000 - £100,000 |
Manufacturing Manager | £50,000 - £100,000 |
Manufacturing Engineer | £35,000 - £53,000 |
Manufacturing Technician | £26,000 - £36,000 |
Quality Director | £62,000 - £90,000 |
Quality Manager | £40,000 - £85,000 |
Quality Engineer | £30,000 - £50,000 |
Quality Inspector | £21,000 - £30,000 |
Quality Technician | £21,000 - £32,000 |
Group/Senior Health & Safety Manager | £56,000 - £100,000 |
Health & Safety Manager | £34,000 - £70,000 |
Health & Safety Officer / Advisor | £26,000 - £45,000 |
Engineering Manager | £37,000 - £125,000 |
Maintenance Manager | £33,000 - £80,000 |
Maintenance Engineer | £35,000 - £53,000 |
Maintenance Technician | £32,000 - £42,000 |
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