Software Engineer (Electrical Background)

Major Recruitment Huddersfield
Shipley, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom
Today
£47,000 – £50,000 pa

Salary

£47,000 – £50,000 pa

Job Type
Permanent
Work Pattern
Full-time
Work Location
On-site
Seniority
Mid
Education
Degree
Posted
18 May 2026 (Today)

Major Recruitment is working with a leading industrial automation partner to source a Software Engineer with a strong electrical engineering background.

The successful candidate will play a key role in developing, modifying, and optimising industrial automation systems for manufacturing environments.

This is an on‑site position based in Shipley, with opportunities to visit customer sites across the region.

You will work closely with electrical, mechanical, and production teams to deliver robust control solutions for automated machinery and production lines.

Key Responsibilities

Design, develop, modify, and maintain PLC programs across multiple platforms, including:

Siemens (TIA Portal / Step 7)

Allen‑Bradley (RSLogix / Studio 5000)

Mitsubishi (GX Works / GX Developer)

Diagnose, troubleshoot, and resolve automation and control system faults on customer sites.

Support the commissioning, testing, and optimisation of automated machinery and production lines.

Work with industrial robots, including:

ABB

Omron

Collaborate with electrical, mechanical, and production colleagues to integrate hardware and software systems.

Prepare clear technical documentation, reports, and system update notes.

Ensure all work complies with relevant safety, quality, and industry standards.What You'll Need

Strong electrical engineering background (degree, HND, or equivalent practical experience).

Proven experience developing and modifying PLC code on Siemens, Allen‑Bradley, and Mitsubishi platforms.

Practical experience working with industrial robots (ABB and Omron experience is preferred).

Ability to read and interpret electrical drawings, control schematics, and technical documentation.

Strong problem‑solving skills and the ability to work independently on complex systems.

Excellent communication skills and a professional, customer‑facing approach.

Willing and able to work on‑site and travel to customer locations as required.Nice to Have

Experience with SCADA or HMI development.

Knowledge of industrial networks (Profinet, Ethernet/IP, Profibus, etc.).

Background within manufacturing, FMCG, packaging, or automation industries.

Familiarity with safety PLCs and machine safety standards.How to Apply

If you're an experienced Software Engineer with an electrical background and a strong PLC and robotics skillset, we'd love to hear from you.

Please submit your CV and a brief cover note outlining your experience with the listed PLC platforms and industrial robots.

Major Recruitment Huddersfield (phone number removed)

INDAC

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Software Engineer

Rise Technical Recruitment Lancaster, Lancashire, United Kingdom
£40,000 – £45,000 pa Hybrid Clearance Required

Software Engineer

Technify Talent Limited Middleton, Lancashire, Lancashire, LA3 3LE, United Kingdom
£45,000 – £50,000 pa On-site

Software Engineer

ATA Recruitment Farnworth, Borough Of Halton, Cheshire, United Kingdom
£60,000 – £80,000 pa

Software Engineer - Runtime Platform, Robot Software

Wayve London, United Kingdom
On-site

Software Engineer (C# / .NET)

Laboris Solutions Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
£40,000 – £80,000 pa On-site

Software Engineer (Object-Oriented Programming)

Ernest Gordon Recruitment Lancaster, Lancashire, United Kingdom
Hybrid Clearance Required

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Robotics Jobs in the UK: Roles, Skills, Salaries and How to Get Hired (2026 Guide)

Robotics Jobs UK 2026: roles, salaries and skills for engineers and researchers in manufacturing, logistics, autonomous vehicles, defence and healthcare. In the UK, most robotics jobs cluster around hubs such as London, Cambridge, Bristol, Oxford, Manchester and Edinburgh, with common titles including Robotics Engineer, SLAM Engineer, Controls Engineer and Mechatronics Engineer. The most efficient way to browse live robotics jobs is via specialist boards like RoboticsJobs.co.uk, which curate roles specifically in this field so you are not lost in generic tech listings. This guide covers everything you need to know about robotics jobs in the UK in 2026, from the roles and skills in demand to where to find live opportunities and how to stand out as a candidate.

Where to Advertise Robotics Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Where to advertise robotics jobs UK in 2026: the specialist boards, university channels and community routes that reach robotics, SLAM and controls talent. The candidate pool spans mechanical engineers, software developers, controls specialists, computer vision researchers and systems integrators — a multidisciplinary mix that general job boards are poorly equipped to reach. The strongest robotics candidates are often embedded in research groups, defence programmes or advanced manufacturing environments, and move between roles through specialist networks and industry events rather than mainstream platforms. This guide, published by RoboticsJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise robotics roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about hiring across different role types.

Robotics Jobs UK 2026: What to Expect Over the Next 3 Years

Robotics Jobs UK 2026: roles, salaries and the automation hiring trends shaping UK robotics careers over the next three years — industrial, service and humanoid. Robotics is having a moment that feels qualitatively different from the cycles of hype and disappointment that have characterised the sector in previous decades. The convergence of advances in AI, computer vision, battery technology, and hardware manufacturing has brought robotics to an inflection point — one where the gap between what robots can do in controlled laboratory conditions and what they can do in the unpredictable complexity of the real world is closing faster than at any previous point in the discipline's history. For job seekers, this inflection point is creating a jobs market that is expanding rapidly across a far wider range of industries and role types than robotics has historically occupied. Automotive and manufacturing remain significant employers, but they are now joined by logistics and warehousing, healthcare, agriculture, construction, defence, and the emerging category of humanoid robotics — each generating distinct hiring demand and drawing on overlapping but meaningfully different skill sets. The candidates who will thrive over the next three years are those who understand where the sector is heading — which application areas are scaling from pilot to production, which technologies are defining the architecture of modern robotic systems, and how the definition of a robotics career is evolving beyond the mechanical engineering core toward a much richer intersection of software, AI, and systems engineering. This article breaks down what the UK robotics jobs market is likely to look like through to 2028 — covering the titles emerging right now, the technologies driving employer demand, the skills that will matter most, and how to position your career at the leading edge of one of the most exciting technology transitions of the coming decade.