Electro-Mechanical Assembler

ProTech Recruitment Ltd
Caddington
4 days ago
Create job alert
Job Role: Electro-Mechanical Assembler
Location: Luton
Duration: 3 months
Start: ASAP
Pay: £14.15ph PAYE / £19ph Ltd
About the Employer

The company has been operating for several decades and supplies specialised technical equipment to clients around the world. Their products are used in professional training environments, and the majority of their output is exported. The production team is small and hands-on, so the successful candidate will be someone who is comfortable working independently and staying focused on tasks.


What We're Looking For

  • Soldering
  • Electro-mechanical assembly
  • Wiring and cable work
  • Familiarity with IPC standards or prior IPC training is advantageous but not essential.

Key Responsibilities

  • Interpret engineering drawings, wiring diagrams, and electronic schematics
  • Assemble components and sub-assemblies to defined specifications
  • Use hand tools and soldering equipment to complete assembly tasks

Required Background

  • Proven experience in an electronics or electro-mechanical assembly environment
  • Competence with hand tools, soldering equipment, and general production tooling
  • Ability to confidently read technical drawings and circuit diagrams

How to Apply

If this is of interest to you, please forward your updated CV to (url removed)


#J-18808-Ljbffr

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Electronics Engineer (Design & Compliance)

Electronics Engineer

Electro-Mechanical Maintenance Technician

Electro-Mechanical Technician

Electromechanical Assembler

Electromechanical Fitters (HV Infrastructure)

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.

How Many Edge Computing Tools Do You Need to Know to Get an Edge Computing Job?

If you’re trying to start or grow a career in edge computing, it can feel like you’re navigating a maze of tools, frameworks and platforms — Kubernetes, Docker, IoT frameworks, AWS Greengrass, Azure IoT Edge, OpenShift, TinyML toolkits, networking orchestration, real-time streaming frameworks, and on it goes. Scroll job boards and community forums and it’s easy to conclude that unless you master every buzzword imaginable, you’ll never get a job. Here’s the honest truth most edge computing hiring managers won’t necessarily say out loud: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every edge computing tool — they hire you because you can solve real system problems using the tools you know. Tools matter, yes — but only when they support clear outcomes: reliable systems, performance at scale, secure edge deployments and real business value. So how many edge computing tools do you actually need to know to secure a job? For most edge computing roles, the answer is fewer than you think — and a lot clearer when sorted by fundamentals and roles. This guide shows you what matters, what doesn’t, and how to focus your time wisely so you come across as capable, confident and employable.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Edge Computing Job Applications (UK Guide)

In today’s fast-evolving tech landscape, edge computing is one of the most sought-after fields — blending distributed systems, embedded systems, networking, cloud, IoT, data and real-time processing. But that also means hiring managers are highly selective. They scan applications fast and look for signals of relevance, impact, technical depth and real-world delivery long before they read every line. This guide demystifies what hiring managers in edge computing look for first in your application — so you can tailor your CV, portfolio and cover letter to jump out of the stack. Whether you’re targeting edge systems roles, embedded IoT edge jobs, edge-native data roles, edge platform engineering or edge-AI positions, this checklist will help you position your experience in a way hiring managers can trust immediately.

The Skills Gap in Edge Computing Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Edge computing is rapidly moving from niche concept to critical infrastructure. As organisations deploy connected devices, sensors, autonomous systems and real-time analytics, processing data closer to where it is generated has become essential. From smart cities and manufacturing to healthcare, transport, defence and telecommunications, edge computing underpins systems where latency, reliability and resilience matter. Demand for edge computing skills across the UK is rising steadily — yet employers consistently report difficulty finding candidates who are genuinely job-ready. Despite growing interest and academic coverage, universities are not fully preparing graduates for real edge computing jobs. This article explores the edge computing skills gap in depth: what universities teach well, what they consistently miss, why the gap exists, what employers actually want, and how jobseekers can bridge the divide to build sustainable careers in edge computing.