Project Manager - Aerospace Parts Manufacturing

HR GO Recruitment
Birchanger, Essex, CM23 5QH, United Kingdom
Today
Job Type
Permanent
Work Pattern
Full-time
Work Location
On-site
Seniority
Mid
Education
Degree
Posted
4 Jun 2026 (Today)

If you're a Project Manager who wants end-to-end ownership in an aerospace parts manufacturing environment-where delivery, compliance and detail matter-this role is built for you. You'll lead customer programmes producing precision aerospace components/assemblies, coordinating production, engineering, procurement and quality to ensure everything ships on time, to specification and within budget. Expect hands-on involvement with MRP/ERP, NPI, and build-to-print work in a controlled, regulated setting.

You will plan and control project flow through an aerospace parts manufacturing business, ensuring contractual and quality requirements are met. You'll act as the primary customer contact for assigned projects, managing schedule, materials, risk, change control and commercial impact.

Key responsibilities

Manage projects from contract review/order receipt through to final delivery (scope, schedule, cost, quality).

Create and communicate project plans, milestones and recovery plans to support OTIF delivery of aerospace parts.

Use MRP/ERP to manage demand, material availability, job progression, capacity and delivery commitments.

Coordinate with Procurement, Production, Engineering and Quality to ensure tooling, documentation and resources are in place.

Lead NPI and build-to-print activity; control drawings, specifications, routings, work instructions and quality requirements.

Identify risks/constraints early and drive mitigation or escalation to protect delivery and margin.

Manage change control (drawing revisions, schedule changes, additional requirements and commercial impacts).

Track/report status, costs, risks and milestones; lead project and customer meetings (including site visits as required).

Experience & skills required

Proven Project/Programme Management experience in manufacturing; aerospace parts manufacturing/defence strongly preferred.

Strong understanding of technical drawings/specifications, regulated quality requirements and change control.

Experience delivering NPI, build-to-print and production-based projects in a controlled environment.

Confident using MRP/ERP (Epicor/Kinetic advantageous) plus Excel, MS Project and Teams.

Commercial awareness and strong stakeholder, planning and problem-solving skills.

PRINCE2/APM desirable; PMP/Lean/CI/supply chain qualifications advantageous.

This is a permanent job with a starting salary dependant on experience. You must have current Uk right to work to be considered. HRGO are a recruitment agency supporting UK manufacturing. We aim to respond to all applications

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Project Manager

Belcan Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom
On-site

Project Manager

Archangel Lightworks Ox11Aa, OX1 1AA, United Kingdom
On-site

Project Manager - Rocket Propulsion

CBSbutler Holdings Limited trading as CBSbutler Summerfield, Worcestershire, Worcestershire, United Kingdom
£36,000 – £55,000 pa Hybrid

Project Manager (Defence and Aerospace)

TÜV SÜD Fareham, Hampshire, United Kingdom
On-site Clearance Required

Engineering Project Manager

BAE Systems Aylesford, Kent, ME20 7BP, United Kingdom
£85,000 pa On-site Clearance Required

Industry Insights

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

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

Where to advertise space jobs UK in 2026: the specialist boards, agency channels and community routes that reach satellite, propulsion and launch talent. The candidate pool spans satellite engineers, propulsion specialists, mission analysts, ground segment software developers, space systems architects and commercial space professionals — a highly specific multidisciplinary community that general job boards are poorly equipped to reach. The strongest space candidates are often embedded in ESA programmes, academic research groups, UK Space Agency-funded projects or established primes, and move between roles through sector-specific networks, industry bodies and conference communities rather than mainstream platforms. This guide, published by UKSpaceJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise space industry 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.

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

Space Jobs UK 2026: roles, salaries and the UK space sector hiring trends shaping satellites, launch, Earth observation and space data careers. The UK space sector is in the middle of something that feels genuinely historic. A combination of government commitment, private capital, and technological progress has transformed Britain's position in the global space economy from a capable but secondary player into a nation with serious sovereign ambitions — and a jobs market that is expanding to match them. This is not the space industry of previous generations, defined by a small number of government agencies, a handful of prime contractors, and career pathways accessible only to a narrow band of elite engineers and scientists. The new space economy is broader, faster-moving, and more commercially driven than anything the sector has previously seen. Satellite manufacturing has been democratised by small sat technology. Launch is becoming domestic. Space data is flowing into applications across agriculture, insurance, climate monitoring, maritime, and defence at a scale that is creating entirely new categories of commercial hiring. And the defence and national security dimensions of space have elevated the sector's strategic importance to a degree that is driving sustained public investment in the talent pipeline. For job seekers, the UK space jobs market of 2026 represents an opportunity that is both more accessible and more technically demanding than at any previous point. The candidates who will thrive over the next three years are those who understand where the sector is heading — which programmes are moving from development into operation, which technologies are defining the architecture of modern space systems, and how the definition of a space career is expanding well beyond the spacecraft engineering core toward a much wider ecosystem of roles across the full space value chain. This article breaks down what the UK space 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 sectors in the UK economy.