Manufacturing Operations

Manufacturing Operations (General) focuses on the day-to-day running of production—scheduling, resource allocation, supervising production and operating workers, monitoring KPIs, ensuring quality/safety compliance, and driving cost and productivity improvements across the shop floor and ultimately the plant and multi-plant network. Distinct from process/quality engineering, supply chain, or maintenance focuses, this focus owns the integrated coordination of production, people, control systems, and operational performance.

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

Individual contributor

P1Manufacturing Operations (General) — P1

Manufacturing Operations (General) focuses on the day-to-day running of production—scheduling, resource allocation, supervising production and operating workers, monitoring KPIs, ensuring quality/safety compliance, and driving cost and productivity improvements across the shop floor and ultimately the plant and multi-plant network. Distinct from process/quality engineering, supply chain, or maintenance focuses, this focus owns the integrated coordination of production, people, control systems, and operational performance.

P2Manufacturing Operations (General) — P2

Manufacturing Operations (General) focuses on the day-to-day running of production—scheduling, resource allocation, supervising production and operating workers, monitoring KPIs, ensuring quality/safety compliance, and driving cost and productivity improvements across the shop floor and ultimately the plant and multi-plant network. Distinct from process/quality engineering, supply chain, or maintenance focuses, this focus owns the integrated coordination of production, people, control systems, and operational performance.

P3Manufacturing Operations (General) — P3

Manufacturing Operations (General) focuses on the day-to-day running of production—scheduling, resource allocation, supervising production and operating workers, monitoring KPIs, ensuring quality/safety compliance, and driving cost and productivity improvements across the shop floor and ultimately the plant and multi-plant network. Distinct from process/quality engineering, supply chain, or maintenance focuses, this focus owns the integrated coordination of production, people, control systems, and operational performance.

P4Manufacturing Operations (General) — P4

Manufacturing Operations (General) focuses on the day-to-day running of production—scheduling, resource allocation, supervising production and operating workers, monitoring KPIs, ensuring quality/safety compliance, and driving cost and productivity improvements across the shop floor and ultimately the plant and multi-plant network. Distinct from process/quality engineering, supply chain, or maintenance focuses, this focus owns the integrated coordination of production, people, control systems, and operational performance.

P5Manufacturing Operations (General) — P5

Manufacturing Operations (General) focuses on the day-to-day running of production—scheduling, resource allocation, supervising production and operating workers, monitoring KPIs, ensuring quality/safety compliance, and driving cost and productivity improvements across the shop floor and ultimately the plant and multi-plant network. Distinct from process/quality engineering, supply chain, or maintenance focuses, this focus owns the integrated coordination of production, people, control systems, and operational performance.

P6Manufacturing Operations (General) — P6

Manufacturing Operations (General) focuses on the day-to-day running of production—scheduling, resource allocation, supervising production and operating workers, monitoring KPIs, ensuring quality/safety compliance, and driving cost and productivity improvements across the shop floor and ultimately the plant and multi-plant network. Distinct from process/quality engineering, supply chain, or maintenance focuses, this focus owns the integrated coordination of production, people, control systems, and operational performance.

Management

M1Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership — M1

Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership: leads people and the daily-to-strategic running of production operations — shift/unit supervision, plant operations, multi-department oversight, single-site P&L and safety leadership, and ultimately multi-site/business-unit operational strategy, CapEx, and board-level accountability. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Process/Manufacturing Engineering (process design), Quality, and EHS, which this track directs but does not individually execute.

M1Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — M1

Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — leads the deployment of Lean and Six Sigma methodologies (DMAIC, value stream mapping, Kaizen, SPC, statistical analysis) to eliminate waste, reduce process variation, and embed continuous improvement (CPI) into manufacturing operations. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Production Supervision (running daily output/staffing/throughput) and Quality Assurance (compliance, inspection, audit): this focus owns the improvement engine — running performance boards, driving root cause analyses, certifying belts, and delivering measurable financial and customer benefits to the business unit.

M1Bioprocess Manufacturing (Upstream/Downstream) — M1

Management of GMP bioprocess manufacturing operations spanning upstream (cell culture AND fermentation, inoculation, cell-line expansion/maintenance, bioreactor and fermenter operation, media/buffer prep) and downstream (chromatography, UF/DF, viral filtration, purification, CIP/SIP). Distinct from sibling Quality Assurance, MSAT/Process Development, and Facilities/Engineering focuses: this focus owns shop-floor batch execution, manufacturing personnel, equipment readiness, and aseptic/regulatory compliance for commercial and clinical production, operating through MES, DeltaV, LIMS, INFOR, and SAP/ERP shop-floor systems. Process-design, scale-up engineering, and equipment-specification authorship reside primarily in the MSAT/Process-Development technical track; manufacturing management partners with that track rather than owning it.

M2Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — M2

Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — leads the deployment of Lean and Six Sigma methodologies (DMAIC, value stream mapping, Kaizen, SPC, statistical analysis) to eliminate waste, reduce process variation, and embed continuous improvement (CPI) into manufacturing operations. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Production Supervision (running daily output/staffing/throughput) and Quality Assurance (compliance, inspection, audit): this focus owns the improvement engine — running performance boards, driving root cause analyses, certifying belts, and delivering measurable financial and customer benefits to the business unit.

M2Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership — M2

Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership: leads people and the daily-to-strategic running of production operations — shift/unit supervision, plant operations, multi-department oversight, single-site P&L and safety leadership, and ultimately multi-site/business-unit operational strategy, CapEx, and board-level accountability. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Process/Manufacturing Engineering (process design), Quality, and EHS, which this track directs but does not individually execute.

M2Bioprocess Manufacturing (Upstream/Downstream) — M2

Management of GMP bioprocess manufacturing operations spanning upstream (cell culture AND fermentation, inoculation, cell-line expansion/maintenance, bioreactor and fermenter operation, media/buffer prep) and downstream (chromatography, UF/DF, viral filtration, purification, CIP/SIP). Distinct from sibling Quality Assurance, MSAT/Process Development, and Facilities/Engineering focuses: this focus owns shop-floor batch execution, manufacturing personnel, equipment readiness, and aseptic/regulatory compliance for commercial and clinical production, operating through MES, DeltaV, LIMS, INFOR, and SAP/ERP shop-floor systems. Process-design, scale-up engineering, and equipment-specification authorship reside primarily in the MSAT/Process-Development technical track; manufacturing management partners with that track rather than owning it.

M3Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership — M3

Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership: leads people and the daily-to-strategic running of production operations — shift/unit supervision, plant operations, multi-department oversight, single-site P&L and safety leadership, and ultimately multi-site/business-unit operational strategy, CapEx, and board-level accountability. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Process/Manufacturing Engineering (process design), Quality, and EHS, which this track directs but does not individually execute.

M3Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — M3

Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — leads the deployment of Lean and Six Sigma methodologies (DMAIC, value stream mapping, Kaizen, SPC, statistical analysis) to eliminate waste, reduce process variation, and embed continuous improvement (CPI) into manufacturing operations. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Production Supervision (running daily output/staffing/throughput) and Quality Assurance (compliance, inspection, audit): this focus owns the improvement engine — running performance boards, driving root cause analyses, certifying belts, and delivering measurable financial and customer benefits to the business unit.

M3Bioprocess Manufacturing (Upstream/Downstream) — M3

Management of GMP bioprocess manufacturing operations spanning upstream (cell culture AND fermentation, inoculation, cell-line expansion/maintenance, bioreactor and fermenter operation, media/buffer prep) and downstream (chromatography, UF/DF, viral filtration, purification, CIP/SIP). Distinct from sibling Quality Assurance, MSAT/Process Development, and Facilities/Engineering focuses: this focus owns shop-floor batch execution, manufacturing personnel, equipment readiness, and aseptic/regulatory compliance for commercial and clinical production, operating through MES, DeltaV, LIMS, INFOR, and SAP/ERP shop-floor systems. Process-design, scale-up engineering, and equipment-specification authorship reside primarily in the MSAT/Process-Development technical track; manufacturing management partners with that track rather than owning it.

M4Bioprocess Manufacturing (Upstream/Downstream) — M4

Management of GMP bioprocess manufacturing operations spanning upstream (cell culture AND fermentation, inoculation, cell-line expansion/maintenance, bioreactor and fermenter operation, media/buffer prep) and downstream (chromatography, UF/DF, viral filtration, purification, CIP/SIP). Distinct from sibling Quality Assurance, MSAT/Process Development, and Facilities/Engineering focuses: this focus owns shop-floor batch execution, manufacturing personnel, equipment readiness, and aseptic/regulatory compliance for commercial and clinical production, operating through MES, DeltaV, LIMS, INFOR, and SAP/ERP shop-floor systems. Process-design, scale-up engineering, and equipment-specification authorship reside primarily in the MSAT/Process-Development technical track; manufacturing management partners with that track rather than owning it.

M4Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — M4

Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — leads the deployment of Lean and Six Sigma methodologies (DMAIC, value stream mapping, Kaizen, SPC, statistical analysis) to eliminate waste, reduce process variation, and embed continuous improvement (CPI) into manufacturing operations. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Production Supervision (running daily output/staffing/throughput) and Quality Assurance (compliance, inspection, audit): this focus owns the improvement engine — running performance boards, driving root cause analyses, certifying belts, and delivering measurable financial and customer benefits to the business unit.

M4Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership — M4

Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership: leads people and the daily-to-strategic running of production operations — shift/unit supervision, plant operations, multi-department oversight, single-site P&L and safety leadership, and ultimately multi-site/business-unit operational strategy, CapEx, and board-level accountability. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Process/Manufacturing Engineering (process design), Quality, and EHS, which this track directs but does not individually execute.

M5Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — M5

Operational Excellence in Manufacturing — leads the deployment of Lean and Six Sigma methodologies (DMAIC, value stream mapping, Kaizen, SPC, statistical analysis) to eliminate waste, reduce process variation, and embed continuous improvement (CPI) into manufacturing operations. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Production Supervision (running daily output/staffing/throughput) and Quality Assurance (compliance, inspection, audit): this focus owns the improvement engine — running performance boards, driving root cause analyses, certifying belts, and delivering measurable financial and customer benefits to the business unit.

M5Bioprocess Manufacturing (Upstream/Downstream) — M5

Management of GMP bioprocess manufacturing operations spanning upstream (cell culture AND fermentation, inoculation, cell-line expansion/maintenance, bioreactor and fermenter operation, media/buffer prep) and downstream (chromatography, UF/DF, viral filtration, purification, CIP/SIP). Distinct from sibling Quality Assurance, MSAT/Process Development, and Facilities/Engineering focuses: this focus owns shop-floor batch execution, manufacturing personnel, equipment readiness, and aseptic/regulatory compliance for commercial and clinical production, operating through MES, DeltaV, LIMS, INFOR, and SAP/ERP shop-floor systems. Process-design, scale-up engineering, and equipment-specification authorship reside primarily in the MSAT/Process-Development technical track; manufacturing management partners with that track rather than owning it.

M5Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership — M5

Manufacturing Management / Operations Leadership: leads people and the daily-to-strategic running of production operations — shift/unit supervision, plant operations, multi-department oversight, single-site P&L and safety leadership, and ultimately multi-site/business-unit operational strategy, CapEx, and board-level accountability. Distinct from sibling focuses such as Process/Manufacturing Engineering (process design), Quality, and EHS, which this track directs but does not individually execute.