Be at the heart of actionFly remote-controlled drones into enemy territory to gather vital information.

Apply Now

HMI Design Engineer

TEC Partners
Essex
2 months ago
Create job alert

A leading engineering company is seeking an HMI Design Engineer for a 12-month contract (Inside IR35) to focus on the design, development, and integration of human-machine interfaces (HMIs) for safety-critical control systems. This fully on-site role requires collaboration with control systems, instrumentation, and human factors teams to ensure operator interfaces are safe, intuitive, and compliant with industry standards.

Key Responsibilities:

Design and develop operator interfaces and HMI displays for control systems Apply human factors principles to improve usability and reduce human error Collaborate with control systems and instrumentation teams to ensure seamless integration Create mock-ups, prototypes, and layouts for validation and operator testing Ensure HMI designs comply with functional safety, alarm management, and relevant standards Support testing, validation, and documentation of HMIs for regulatory and operational approval

Requirements:

Proven experience in HMI design / SCADA / DCS systems Strong understanding of control systems and instrumentation integration Knowledge of human factors, usability, and ergonomic principles Experience with functional safety standards, alarm management, and interface guidelines Ability to produce mock-ups, prototypes, and design documentation Strong collaboration and communication skills for multidisciplinary teams Eligible to work fully on-site

Benefits:

12-month contract with potential for extension (Inside of IR35) Competitive, negotiable rate Work on safety-critical control systems Gain experience across HMI design, human factors, and control systems integration Collaborate with multi-disciplinary technical teams in a structured engineering environment

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Control Systems Engineer

Control Systems Engineer

EC&I Systems Engineer

Controls Systems Engineer

Automation Service Engineer Midlands

Controls Software Engineer (PLC/SCADA) – Customer Service

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.

Cyber Security Recruitment Trends 2025 (UK): What Job Seekers Must Know About Today’s Hiring Process

Summary: UK cyber security hiring has shifted from title‑led CV screens to capability‑driven assessments that emphasise incident readiness, cloud & identity security, detection engineering, governance/risk/compliance (GRC), measurable MTTR/coverage gains & secure‑by‑default engineering. This guide explains what’s changed, what to expect in interviews, & how to prepare—especially for SOC analysts, detection engineers, blue/purple teamers, penetration testers, cloud security engineers, DFIR, AppSec, GRC & security architecture. Who this is for: SOC & detection engineers, security operations leads, DFIR analysts, penetration testers/red teamers, purple teamers, AppSec/DevSecOps engineers, security architects, cloud security engineers, identity/IAM engineers, vulnerability managers, GRC/compliance specialists, product security & security programme managers targeting roles in the UK.

Why Cyber Security Careers in the UK Are Becoming More Multidisciplinary

Cyber security used to be viewed primarily as a technical discipline: firewalls, encryption, intrusion detection, penetration testing. In the UK today, it’s far broader. Organisations now face complex legal frameworks, ethical dilemmas, human-behaviour risks, communication challenges & usability hurdles. This shift means cyber security careers are becoming more multidisciplinary. From protecting NHS patient records to defending financial services, securing supply chains & safeguarding national infrastructure, cyber security now touches every sector. Employers increasingly want professionals who understand law, ethics, psychology, linguistics & design alongside traditional technical skills. In this article, we’ll explore why UK cyber security careers are expanding in this way, how these five disciplines shape the profession, and what job-seekers & employers need to know to thrive in this new landscape.

Cyber Security Team Structures Explained: Who Does What in a Modern Cyber Security Department

Cyber security has become a top priority for UK organisations of all sizes. From small businesses to financial institutions, healthcare providers, and government bodies, the risk of cyber attack is now a constant concern. Threats are more sophisticated, regulations more demanding, and customers more aware of data privacy than ever before. But defending against cyber threats isn’t simply about having the right tools — it’s about having the right team. A modern cyber security department relies on clearly defined roles and responsibilities to ensure that defences are proactive, incidents are managed swiftly, and compliance is maintained. This article explains the structure of a modern cyber security team, the roles you’ll typically find within it, how they collaborate, and what skills, qualifications, and salaries are expected in the UK job market.