Director Quality Manager

Kintore
3 days ago
Create job alert

Job Title – Director Quality Global
Location - Kintore

The Director, Global Quality, is responsible for defining, leading, and governing enterprise-wide initiatives that reduce Cost of Poor Quality (COPQ) and improve operational efficiency. This role establishes strategy, standards, and execution frameworks for defect prevention, process capability improvement, and root-cause elimination across all business units and regions.  
The Director, Global Quality leads the development and continuous improvement of the Quality Management System (QMS), fostering a culture of excellence, accountability, and precision across all projects and facilities. 

Remit & Responsibilities: 
•    Lead cross-functional programs that eliminate systemic drivers of scrap, rework, warranty, field failures, compliance deviations, and service defects. 
•    Deploy standardized problem-solving methodologies and ensure consistent global adoption. 
•    Build and manage a global COPQ dashboard, ensuring accurate classification, measurement, and financial validation of quality-related losses and trends. 
•    Partner with Operations, Quality, Engineering, Supply Chain, and Finance to identify high-impact improvement opportunities and prioritize the project portfolio. 
•    Coordinate implementation and sustainment of operational improvements, ensuring handoff to line ownership. 
•    Provide expert coaching to site and regional leaders on process improvement tools, statistical analysis, and design-for-quality practices. 
•    Lead global root-cause investigations for major quality incidents and oversee implementation of sustainable corrective actions. 
•    Standardize best practices, work processes, use of technology and control plans across sites to improve first-pass yield, reduce variability, and enhance process capability. 
•    Develop and own the global COPQ reduction strategy, including targets, performance frameworks, and reporting standards. 

Job Specific Education Required
Essential:  
•    Bachelor's degree in engineering, Metallurgy, Welding Engineering, or related field (Master’s preferred).
•    Seasoned professional with progressive experience in welding/fabrication quality management within the energy sector (oil & gas, renewables, or power). 
•    Extensive experience in global operational excellence, quality systems, or manufacturing/process engineering. Demonstrated success leading large-scale cost-reduction and quality-improvement initiatives. Strong financial acumen with proven ability to quantify and validate COPQ improvements. 
•    Strong understanding of fabrication documentation control, project QA/QC plans, and supplier quality assurance. 
•    Excellent leadership, analytical, and communication skills with the ability to influence at all organizational levels across diverse functions, cultures and leadership levels. 

Work Experience Required
Essential:  
•    Strong technical expertise in energy industry operational requirements, particularly within Oil & Gas, Renewables and Infrastructure sectors.  

Skills & Knowledge Required
Essential:  
•    Technical excellence in operations and fabrication processes. 
•    Strategic leadership with a hands-on approach to problem-solving. 
•    Strong understanding of international codes, standards, and customer specifications. 
•    Continuous improvement mindset with a focus on data-driven decision-making. 
•    Excellent interpersonal skills for cross-functional collaboration and client engagement. 
•    High ethical standards, safety focus, and commitment to quality integrity.Requirement to travel  
•    Estimated requirement to travel circa 15% of time.

People are our business worldwide
 
Orion Group was founded in 1987 and is now one of the largest, independent, international recruitment companies. We have a network of 200 employees working from 24 offices, delivering a range of services – Talent Acquisition, Recruitment Outsourcing Services, Retained Search, Global Workforce Solutions, Completions & Commissioning and Materials Management – across 68 countries. As a global leader in workforce solutions, we recruit personnel across the Engineering & Technical, Office & Commercial, Scientific and Skilled Trades disciplines, for sectors including Oil & Gas, Life Science, Power & Utilities, Constructions & Infrastructure, Manufacturing and Renewables

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Technical Training Manager

Technical Sales Manager

R&D Director

R&D Director

HR Business Partner

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 Materials Science Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Materials Science Job?

If you’re navigating the materials science job market, it can feel like the list of tools, techniques and platforms you should learn grows every week. One job advert mentions electron microscopy, another mentions X-ray diffraction, yet another wants experience with thermal analysis, spectroscopy, simulation software, statistical packages, manufacturing QA systems and more. With so many specialised methods and instruments, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed — and to start thinking you need to know everything just to be considered. Here’s the honest truth most materials science hiring managers won’t tell you directly: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every piece of equipment or software. They hire you because you can use the tools you do know to answer real questions, make reliable measurements and communicate results clearly. Tools are essential — no question — but they are secondary to problem-solving ability, scientific reasoning and experimental rigour. So the real question is: how many materials science tools do you actually need to know to get a job? The precise number depends on the role you want, but for most job seekers the answer is far fewer than you think. This article breaks down what employers really value, which tools are core, which are role-specific, and how to focus your learning so your CV and interviews stand out for the right reasons.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Materials Science Job Applications (UK Guide)

Materials science is a broad, interdisciplinary field that spans academia, industry, research, engineering and manufacturing. Whether you’re applying for roles in R&D, process development, quality assurance, failure analysis, nanomaterials or product scale-up, hiring managers make key decisions within the first few seconds of scanning your application. In competitive job markets, simply listing skills or qualifications isn’t enough. Hiring managers are looking for signals of relevance, technical depth, problem-solving capability and real-world impact — and they expect those signals to be clear right from the top of your CV or portfolio. This guide breaks down exactly what hiring managers typically look for first in materials science applications, why they look for it, and how you can optimise your CV, cover letter and portfolio so your application stands out and gets past the first filter.

The Skills Gap in Materials Science Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Materials science sits at the heart of innovation — from sustainable energy and advanced manufacturing to aerospace, electronics, healthcare and beyond. It is an interdisciplinary field combining physics, chemistry, engineering and applied science to design and improve materials that power modern technology. Despite the clear strategic importance of materials science, employers across the UK report persistent challenges hiring graduates who are truly job-ready. Organisations need professionals who can contribute immediately to research, development, manufacturing, quality control and product scale-up — yet many recent graduates struggle to bridge the gap between academic preparation and workplace demands. This gap is not caused by a lack of intelligence or enthusiasm. It is a growing skills gap between what universities teach and what real materials science jobs require. This article explores the materials science skills gap in depth: what universities teach well, what they often miss, why the gap exists, what employers want, and how aspiring professionals can bridge the divide to build successful careers in this vital UK industry.