Shirley Parsons is thrilled to partner with one of our long-standing clients in the Construction/Design sector to offer a Quality Engineer position. This exciting opportunity provides flexibility with hybrid working options and is available in Manchester, York, or Motherwell.
The role offers a competitive salary between £40,000 - £50,000 (depending on experience), along with a car allowance and additional benefits.
Quality Engineer Responsibilities
Support and guide project teams with Quality Related activities & planning
Boost compliance with Integrated Management System (IMS)
Identify improvement opportunities and assist with update and improvement of the IMS
Understand project / sector / client Quality requirements and Provide Quality Management support to external parties
Planning and execution of Internal Quality Audits and compliance assessments
Management of Internal Audit Schedule
Management of SHEQ Action tracker (updating records, requesting updates, confirming corrections, establishing root cause and corrective actions, closing out actions)
Logging and processing feedback and improvement requests
Providing project compliance support and producing and/or reviewing Quality Plans & Project Execution Plans
Planning and execution of lessons learnt sessions and closing the loop to ensure improvement is realised
Quality Engineer Qualifications & Experience required:
Experience with the application of ISO 9001 within Design and Engineering or a construction organisation.
3 years experience of Internal Auditing (Including planning, execution, record keeping, tracking and close out)
Organising and chairing lessons learnt / improvement events
Experience of root cause analysis
Experience of 2nd Party audit and supply chain management (cascade of requirements and examination of compliance)
Good level of knowledge and experience with MS Word, Excel, Visio, Powerpoint & Outlook
Vacancy Reference: PR/(phone number removed)
Vacancy Owner: Jessica Plested | (url removed) | (+44) (phone number removed) | (+44) (phone number removed)