Manufacturing & Industrial Engineering

Designs, improves, and optimizes production systems, processes, tooling, and automation to deliver high-quality products efficiently and cost-effectively. Distinct from quality engineering (which owns inspection/compliance systems) and product/design engineering (which owns product definition); this focus centers on how products are physically built — process design, manufacturability, capital equipment, yield, and continuous improvement on the production floor.

17 leveled profiles. Pick a level to see the full profile.

Individual contributor

P1Manufacturing / Industrial Engineering — P1

Designs, improves, and optimizes production systems, processes, tooling, and automation to deliver high-quality products efficiently and cost-effectively. Distinct from quality engineering (which owns inspection/compliance systems) and product/design engineering (which owns product definition); this focus centers on how products are physically built — process design, manufacturability, capital equipment, yield, and continuous improvement on the production floor.

P1Calibration Technician — P1

Calibrates, maintains, repairs, installs, and troubleshoots instrumentation and equipment measuring temperature, light, electrical, mechanical, weight, flow, pipette, and pressure properties. Distinct from broader instrumentation/controls engineering and from quality engineering: this focus centers on measurement science (metrology), traceable calibration to recognized standards (ISO/IEC 17025, ANSI/NCSL Z540), measurement uncertainty analysis, and issuance of calibration certificates rather than process or product design.

P1Equipment Maintenance & Reliability — P1

Equipment Maintenance & Reliability engineering: ensures plant assets perform their required functions across the full life cycle by designing and executing condition-based and preventive maintenance programs, performing root cause and failure-mode analyses, modeling reliability metrics, and optimizing maintenance strategies in EAM/CMMS systems. Distinct from sibling focuses such as process/production engineering (throughput and line design), quality engineering (defect and conformance), and facilities/plant engineering (infrastructure systems) — this focus is anchored in asset reliability, failure elimination, and total cost of ownership.

P2Manufacturing / Industrial Engineering — P2

Designs, improves, and optimizes production systems, processes, tooling, and automation to deliver high-quality products efficiently and cost-effectively. Distinct from quality engineering (which owns inspection/compliance systems) and product/design engineering (which owns product definition); this focus centers on how products are physically built — process design, manufacturability, capital equipment, yield, and continuous improvement on the production floor.

P2Equipment Maintenance & Reliability — P2

Equipment Maintenance & Reliability engineering: ensures plant assets perform their required functions across the full life cycle by designing and executing condition-based and preventive maintenance programs, performing root cause and failure-mode analyses, modeling reliability metrics, and optimizing maintenance strategies in EAM/CMMS systems. Distinct from sibling focuses such as process/production engineering (throughput and line design), quality engineering (defect and conformance), and facilities/plant engineering (infrastructure systems) — this focus is anchored in asset reliability, failure elimination, and total cost of ownership.

P2Calibration Technician — P2

Calibrates, maintains, repairs, installs, and troubleshoots instrumentation and equipment measuring temperature, light, electrical, mechanical, weight, flow, pipette, and pressure properties. Distinct from broader instrumentation/controls engineering and from quality engineering: this focus centers on measurement science (metrology), traceable calibration to recognized standards (ISO/IEC 17025, ANSI/NCSL Z540), measurement uncertainty analysis, and issuance of calibration certificates rather than process or product design.

P3Calibration Technician — P3

Calibrates, maintains, repairs, installs, and troubleshoots instrumentation and equipment measuring temperature, light, electrical, mechanical, weight, flow, pipette, and pressure properties. Distinct from broader instrumentation/controls engineering and from quality engineering: this focus centers on measurement science (metrology), traceable calibration to recognized standards (ISO/IEC 17025, ANSI/NCSL Z540), measurement uncertainty analysis, and issuance of calibration certificates rather than process or product design.

P3Equipment Maintenance & Reliability — P3

Equipment Maintenance & Reliability engineering: ensures plant assets perform their required functions across the full life cycle by designing and executing condition-based and preventive maintenance programs, performing root cause and failure-mode analyses, modeling reliability metrics, and optimizing maintenance strategies in EAM/CMMS systems. Distinct from sibling focuses such as process/production engineering (throughput and line design), quality engineering (defect and conformance), and facilities/plant engineering (infrastructure systems) — this focus is anchored in asset reliability, failure elimination, and total cost of ownership.

P3Manufacturing / Industrial Engineering — P3

Designs, improves, and optimizes production systems, processes, tooling, and automation to deliver high-quality products efficiently and cost-effectively. Distinct from quality engineering (which owns inspection/compliance systems) and product/design engineering (which owns product definition); this focus centers on how products are physically built — process design, manufacturability, capital equipment, yield, and continuous improvement on the production floor.

P4Equipment Maintenance & Reliability — P4

Equipment Maintenance & Reliability engineering: ensures plant assets perform their required functions across the full life cycle by designing and executing condition-based and preventive maintenance programs, performing root cause and failure-mode analyses, modeling reliability metrics, and optimizing maintenance strategies in EAM/CMMS systems. Distinct from sibling focuses such as process/production engineering (throughput and line design), quality engineering (defect and conformance), and facilities/plant engineering (infrastructure systems) — this focus is anchored in asset reliability, failure elimination, and total cost of ownership.

P4Manufacturing / Industrial Engineering — P4

Designs, improves, and optimizes production systems, processes, tooling, and automation to deliver high-quality products efficiently and cost-effectively. Distinct from quality engineering (which owns inspection/compliance systems) and product/design engineering (which owns product definition); this focus centers on how products are physically built — process design, manufacturability, capital equipment, yield, and continuous improvement on the production floor.

P4Calibration Technician — P4

Calibrates, maintains, repairs, installs, and troubleshoots instrumentation and equipment measuring temperature, light, electrical, mechanical, weight, flow, pipette, and pressure properties. Distinct from broader instrumentation/controls engineering and from quality engineering: this focus centers on measurement science (metrology), traceable calibration to recognized standards (ISO/IEC 17025, ANSI/NCSL Z540), measurement uncertainty analysis, and issuance of calibration certificates rather than process or product design.

P5Calibration Technician — P5

Calibrates, maintains, repairs, installs, and troubleshoots instrumentation and equipment measuring temperature, light, electrical, mechanical, weight, flow, pipette, and pressure properties. Distinct from broader instrumentation/controls engineering and from quality engineering: this focus centers on measurement science (metrology), traceable calibration to recognized standards (ISO/IEC 17025, ANSI/NCSL Z540), measurement uncertainty analysis, and issuance of calibration certificates rather than process or product design.

P5Equipment Maintenance & Reliability — P5

Equipment Maintenance & Reliability engineering: ensures plant assets perform their required functions across the full life cycle by designing and executing condition-based and preventive maintenance programs, performing root cause and failure-mode analyses, modeling reliability metrics, and optimizing maintenance strategies in EAM/CMMS systems. Distinct from sibling focuses such as process/production engineering (throughput and line design), quality engineering (defect and conformance), and facilities/plant engineering (infrastructure systems) — this focus is anchored in asset reliability, failure elimination, and total cost of ownership.

P5Manufacturing / Industrial Engineering — P5

Designs, improves, and optimizes production systems, processes, tooling, and automation to deliver high-quality products efficiently and cost-effectively. Distinct from quality engineering (which owns inspection/compliance systems) and product/design engineering (which owns product definition); this focus centers on how products are physically built — process design, manufacturability, capital equipment, yield, and continuous improvement on the production floor.

P6Manufacturing / Industrial Engineering — P6

Designs, improves, and optimizes production systems, processes, tooling, and automation to deliver high-quality products efficiently and cost-effectively. Distinct from quality engineering (which owns inspection/compliance systems) and product/design engineering (which owns product definition); this focus centers on how products are physically built — process design, manufacturability, capital equipment, yield, and continuous improvement on the production floor.

P6Equipment Maintenance & Reliability — P6

Equipment Maintenance & Reliability engineering: ensures plant assets perform their required functions across the full life cycle by designing and executing condition-based and preventive maintenance programs, performing root cause and failure-mode analyses, modeling reliability metrics, and optimizing maintenance strategies in EAM/CMMS systems. Distinct from sibling focuses such as process/production engineering (throughput and line design), quality engineering (defect and conformance), and facilities/plant engineering (infrastructure systems) — this focus is anchored in asset reliability, failure elimination, and total cost of ownership.