Empresa:
Xelvin
Descrição da Função
Are you passionate about driving positive change and shaping the future of technology in a dynamic, international environment? Then we invite you to join our team in the Netherlands!
About the Role
We are looking for a driven Failure Analysis Engineer. In this role, you will work within a multidisciplinary team at the technical heart of our organization. Your key stakeholders include quality engineers, development teams, and manufacturing departments.
As a Failure Analysis Engineer, you will perform Root Cause Analyses on complex electronic and mechatronic products that are returned either by customers or from internal manufacturing. Your findings are critical in supporting the quality team with improvement strategies and resolving failure modes. Additionally, you will be responsible for implementing containment actions to manage non-conformities and optimize production flow.
What do we offer?
- A contract of 40 hours per week, with the prospect of a permanent contract.
- A great salary that suits your experience and knowledge.
- 25 paid holidays a year (+ 13 potential ADV days).
- Holiday allowance of 8.33% (instead of 8,0%) over your total gross annual income. Paid each year in May.
- Travel allowance of €0,23 per km or a lease car from the company.
- A relocation assistance allowance of € 3.000 NET will be paid to you, to assist with the cost of relocating to the Netherlands.
- We'll advise you on how to set up a Dutch bank account, apply for health insurance, getting a Dutch BSN number, writing in with a dentist and general practitioner and other useful or necessary cases to arrange.
Your Profile:
- Bachelor's degree (BSc or BEng) in Electrical Engineering, Mechatronics, or a related technical field.
- Proficient in English, both written and spoken.
- A minimum of 3 years of experience in a similar role.
- Strong analytical and problemsolving mindset: you thrive on diving deep into and solving technical problems.
- Hands-on attitude - You enjoy working directly with technology.

Observações
Porto (Portugal)