09 Apr 2026

Jobs in manufacturing and engineering: A career worth building

Explore careers in manufacturing and engineering. Learn roles, pay, skills, and progression in fabrication, sheet metal, and CNC machining. Start your career today.

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Written by Richard Bourne from Bespoke Career Solutions ltd

If you’re a young person thinking about your future career, manufacturing and engineering might not always be the first option that comes to mind, but it should be. These skills are in demand!

Engineering and Manufacturing industries are the backbone of the UK economy, offering hands-on, well paid, and secure careers where you can actually see the results of your work. From building structures to machining precision parts, these are roles where what you do truly matters.

Engineering and Manufacturing are key to a growing economy.

Having a technical know how and the skills to build and create products used everyday is a career to be proud of.

Learning skills and taking a career path into engineering can create a wide range of opportunities and exciting roles for your future. Engineering skills are always in demand and candidates with this knowledge will enjoy secure and exciting careers in the sector.

 

What do jobs in manufacturing and engineering involve?

Manufacturing and engineering roles are all about creating, shaping, and building real world products.

Unlike some careers where your work exists only on a screen, these jobs produce tangible outcomes, things you can physically see, touch, and be proud of.

 

Typical day-to-day activities include:

Reading and working from technical or engineering drawings

Operating machinery and tools. These can range from CNC machining to conventional lathes and millers. Manufacturing involves a variety of skilled machining process’

Measuring, cutting, shaping, and assembling materials. Using Micrometre, verniers and specialised measuring equipment for accuracy

Problem-solving and adapting designs. Not all designs are perfect, engineers need to think on their feet and find a solution to a problem

Ensuring high-quality standards are met. Engineering is all about precision, if it doesn’t fit it doesn’t work. Engineers need to have a good eye for details whilst always aware of quality

Working as part of a skilled team. Working within a team of other skilled engineers can help develop knowledge and understanding much quicker than in a classroom environment

Every day is different, especially in roles involving bespoke or custom work. As an Engineer you can experience a wide range of manufacturing process’ and techniques to create the perfect product.

 

Key Roles in the Industry – What is the day to day like?

Fabrication

Fabricators build and assemble metal structures and components. This can involve cutting, bending, welding, and assembling materials into finished products. Machines involved may be a Brake press, guillotine, CNC Saws, welders, Lasers amongst many others.

 

Day-to-day

Reading detailed drawings – The office will design a product using CAD to create a drawing of what they want to make. A fabricator can interpret the drawings using measurements and dimensions given.

Measuring and cutting materials – accuracy is the key!

Welding (MIG/TIG) – Putting together what the drawing shows and welding the cut components into a finished piece

Building structures from scratch

 

Typical pay

£13 (starting rate) – £18 per hour (experienced roles can exceed this)

 

Sheet metal work

Sheet metal workers specialise in shaping and forming metal into products like enclosures, panels, and ducting.

Day-to-day

Operating press brakes and guillotines, this can involve setting the machines

Folding and forming metal

Working to precise measurements

Producing batch or bespoke items

 

Typical pay

£12.71 (starting rate) – £19 per hour

 

CNC machining (programming, setting and operating)

CNC (Computer Numerical Control) machining is one of the most in-demand and technical areas.

Operators load and run machines

Setters prepare machines and tools, tool changes, resetting codes and preparing machines fort batch runs

Programmers write the code that controls the machines. This will set the parameters the machine will work to cut, shape or form the materials

 

Day-to-day

Setting up CNC machines

Loading/unloading parts

Tool changes and adjustments

Writing or editing programs (advanced roles)

Inspecting finished components

 

Typical pay

Operator: £12.71 – £16 per hour
 

Setter: £14 – £20 per hour

Programmer: £17 – £25+ per hour

 

What skills do you need?

These careers are ideal if you enjoy practical, hands-on work and solving real problems.

Core skills include:

Attention to detail

Problem-solving

Ability to read technical drawings

Practical and mechanical skills

Teamwork and communication

Willingness to learn

You don’t need to know everything from day one—many people start through apprenticeships or entry-level roles and build their skills over time.

 

Why Choose manufacturing and engineering?

Job Satisfaction

There’s something incredibly rewarding about creating something from raw materials. At the end of the day, you can see what you’ve achieved. Making parts needed in everyday products or building architectural steelwork you can physically see what you have made and appreciate the results of your work

 

Strong career progression

You can start as a trainee or operator and work your way up to:

Skilled Fabricator or CNC Setter

Programmer or Specialist Technician

Supervisor or Workshop Manager

Even into design or engineering roles

 

Job Security

Manufacturing and engineering skills are always in demand. These are essential industries, meaning long-term job stability.

 

Competitive Pay

With experience, your earning potential increases significantly—especially in specialised or technical roles.

 

Career path: Where can it take you?

A typical journey might look like this:

Apprentice / Trainee → Operator → Skilled Technician → Senior / Specialist → Supervisor / Manager / Director /Owner

Or in CNC:

Operator → Setter → Programmer → Manufacturing Engineer

The more skills you gain, the more valuable you become.

 

Real-world impact

One of the biggest advantages of these careers is that your work has real world impact. You could be:

Producing components used in construction. You can see a project you have had an input in

Manufacturing parts for vehicles or machinery. All mechanical goods and machines need parts. There will always be security in engineering as long as people still need cars, machines, aeroplanes or anything else mechanical

Creating bespoke designs for specialist industries. Some projects are more bespoke and require one-off design and knowledge. These can be incredibly satisfying to create a product from start to finish

You’re not just doing a job, you’re contributing to something bigger.

 

Final thoughts

Manufacturing and engineering jobs are real jobs.

There will always be a career path into these sectors whilst people need products. Learning hands on skills in these sectors will ensure a stable and rewarding career with opportunities to grow.

Manufacturing and engineering offer a career path that is:

Practical

Rewarding

Secure

Well-paid

Full of progression opportunities

If you enjoy working with your hands, solving problems, and building something real, this could be the perfect career for you.

At Bespoke Career Solutions, we work closely with employers across these sectors and regularly support candidates starting and growing their careers in engineering and manufacturing.

Your future doesn’t have to be behind a desk, it could be in building something incredible. Engineering and manufacturing opportunities are everywhere with employers specifically looking for skilled candidates in these sectors. A career in these sectors can take you to exciting places and develop long term meaningful career options.