Showing posts with label Aerospace Jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aerospace Jobs. Show all posts

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Landing the Finest Aerospace Jobs at Boeing

Landing the Finest Aerospace Jobs at Boeing

There are few names that are as synonymous with an industry as Boeing is with aerospace technology. Boeing is an American aerospace firm with connections throughout the world and a staff of tens of thousands. The company has expanded steadily as corporations, governments, and airlines have sought out a variety of aerospace solutions for their unique markets. Indeed, Boeing brings in millions upon millions of pounds in orders each year, which are fulfilled by a variety of engineering, design, and production professionals. For aerospace professionals, there are few companies that match the allure or the benefits of a company like Boeing.


However, Boeing has a high standard for its employees. Aside from the need for top notch professionals to fill all of their positions, Boeing relies on outstanding service and performance to maintain their brand name. These high standards make it difficult for an aerospace engineer or designer to land a job with Boeing. However, there are a few tips that can help land an interview and a position with Boeing for the right professional.

The first step for a professional applying to Boeing is to craft a unique and eye-catching set of application materials. Some positions require an essay or sample of work in order to complete the application. This sample shouldn’t be pedestrian nor should it be something of a lower standard, like early university work. Essays and work samples should be creative and show an ability to think outside of the box. As well, the CV should be concise and hit on all of the major job experiences relevant to a position with Boeing. 

Another step for landing a job with Boeing is searching out graduate training and internship programs. Depending on the job region applied to, Boeing may have a variety of entry level positions for engineering graduates that can allow them to ease into full time professional positions. In this way, Boeing is able to invest in exceptional graduates while a professional can have job stability and gain experience in the industry. 

Finally, an aerospace professional should consider working with a speciality recruiter in order to land their Boeing aerospace job. Recruiters that specialise in placing aerospace professionals have exclusive positions available to professionals with great potential and experience. As well, recruiting agencies that work with Boeing or other aerospace firms can help train young professionals to get them ready for the first day of work. Aerospace workers looking for jobs with Boeing should leave no stone unturned.

About the Author
Wynnwith Aerospace are a specialist aerospace recruitment division which fulfil aerospace jobs, including electrical engineer jobs,Catia V4 designers and stress engineer positions.
(ArticlesBase SC #281588)

Friday, September 17, 2010

ExPat Aerospace Jobs

ExPat Aerospace Jobs




Aerospace jobs in Toulouse.
Based in Toulouse, France, Airbus Industrie is a European consortium, founded in 1969 with a Franco-German lead, and later British and Spanish participation. Its first product, the A300, a 266 seat commercial plane, had British wings, mostly German fuselage, French nose section and lower part of the centre fuselage and Spanish tails. Both GE and P&W in the USA made the engines. Honeywell supplied US-made avionics and Messier-Hispano-Bugatti the landing gear. Toulouse is the main, but not the only, assembly location for Airbus; the second is Hamburg, Germany.
Today, Airbus has become the world's largest producer of commercial aircraft. In 2000, it produced 311 planes in Toulouse. Airbus assembles six different models of aircraft with parts and components coming from 1,500 contractors located in 30 countries. The largest single provider is the USA with over 800 suppliers located in 40 states. In the meantime, Toulouse has become a major aerospace cluster, with hundreds of firms. These include ATR, the Franco-Italian manufacturer of turboprops, which produced 22 turboprops in 2000. Other firms present in the region are Turbomeca (turbines), Messier-Dowty (landing gear for 30 airframers both civil and military, including Airbus) and EADS Socata, the French member of the European consortium. EADS produces small aircraft and structures for Airbus in the region. Toulouse has attracted other aerospace producers not necessarily linked with civil aircraft, such as Matra and Alcatel (satellite telecommunications). In addition to Toulouse, Airbus Industrie has 12 other European production sites, in Bremen, Hamburg, Munich and Stade (Germany), Chester (UK), Madrid and Seville (Spain), Amsterdam (Netherlands), Gossellies (Belgium), as well as Meaulte, Nantes and St Nazaire (France).
In 1997 there were 494 plants in the Toulouse region directly linked to aerospace. More often than not, final aircraft assembling occurs in one region (typically Hamburg and Toulouse for Airbus, Seattle for Boeing, and Montreal for Bombardier), engine assembly in another (Bristol for Rolls-Royce, Hartford, Connecticut and Montreal for P&W, Evendale, Ohio or Lynn, Massachusetts for GE), yet critical parts such as avionics, landing gear or nacelles are produced somewhere else. Four characteristics appear when these knowledge flows are examined. First, they are mostly international. Second, they are mostly constituted of explicit and codified knowledge. Third, they involve several independent companies. And finally, they are closely tied to markets for parts, components and subassemblies.
Middle East Aerospace jobs.
In areas where there has been recent investment and growth, you can see the process all over again, aircraft engineering jobs in Abu Dhabi, where the investment has been, or aircraft engineering jobs Milan where Lufthansa Technik has opened a new maintenance and repair centre.
aviation-database.com has lots of resources for the aircraft industry. The web is a vast source of information. Aviation-database collects the industry into one huge database of contacts. Middle East aerospace jobs are posts filled by Aeropeople on behalf of clients in the region.



Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Aerospace Career - Excellent Jobs For The Adventurous

Aerospace Career - Excellent Jobs For The Adventurous



If you have decided to change your vocation and join the aerospace industry you could not have made a better choice. No matter what back ground you come from, there is room for most of the categories in this industry. Unlike the other organisations the aerospace industry is not what one would call a "common area" in the business arena.
Common Job roles in every industry

There are common job positions on all the industries, like sales and marketing and finances etc. are to be found in ever kind of industry. This knowledge will help you when you plan to change your job and go in for something different. However, the aerospace industry is quite different to all others and has some very specific job roles that go with it. So if you are opting for an aerospace job you will have to have some knowledge of what this kind of industry entails. You will have to get into a completely new arena with a transition that will be much more difficult than between two other industries.
Some job positions will remain the same and need the same sort of background and qualification no matter what industry you are in. For instance if you are into web site designing, you will be doing the same thing even if you join a different company. Your job description remains the same. The same holds good for statisticians, chartered accountants and financial advisors, and many other such job roles. You will still be doing what you were initially trained for.
Sometimes you might remain in the same industry but with a totally new and different job description. If you have been a pilot in the aerospace industry and now have changed to being a navigator you continue in the same line but with a new job description. So as long as you are aware of what the job change entails and are prepared for it you will have no problem in making the transition in a smooth way.
In case you have set your heart on the aerospace industry you could also search on the net for all the different options that they have either to join the industry or to get out of it and change to something different. There are common jobs available in the aerospace industry and several others outside it. You could be qualified to take on something that will be in this common area and for what you are suitable qualified. This would give you the confidence to be able to work in any other industry in the same area.
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Thursday, September 9, 2010

Advantages of Becoming an Aerospace Engineer

Advantages of Becoming an Aerospace Engineer


Now is a great time to get in aerospace engineering. NASA is beginning to phase out the space shuttles (due to be retired in 2010) and is in the process of developing the Ares rockets. These are to be the spacecraft of the future. There is a great deal of involving in the development of these rockets. There are to be two rockets per trip in the Ares program, a rocket that carries the crew, the Ares I rocket, and a rocket that carries the cargo, the Ares V rocket.
For students beginning college in the near future, this is a chance to help develop and work in the next step of space exploration. NASA is planning to establish a base on the moon by 2018 and to launch a manned mission to Mars from the moon. What an honor and privilege it would be to work on the first manned mission to another planet! Over 200 private companies currently have contracts with NASA on the Ares program. NASA is planning the first test flight for the Ares I rocket to be scheduled for 2009.
NASA is also currently developing a new lunar lander named Altair. Altair will be capable of landing four astronauts on the moon and it will provide the astronauts a temporary base on the surface moon for one week. Here at NC State, our aerospace engineering department is working the ablative shielding for the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV), the command module of the Ares I rocket. The ablative shielding is the layer of material that burns off the spacecraft during reentry. It prevents the spacecraft from burning up on reentry. Lockheed Martin was awarded the contract for Orion.
There are many co-op and internship opportunities available for aerospace engineers. Many of the private aerospace companies offer co-ops and internships and NASA offers a few as well. Co-ops and internships are like extended job interviews. You are paid to go and work at an aerospace company and if they like you, then you are already in good standing with the company and the company knows what you are capable of. They may offer a job before you even graduate! Imagine still being in college and having the peace of mind that when you graduate, you already have a job waiting for you.
Many private aerospace companies are in the development stages of commercial space flight. Virgin Galactic, for example, is working on a spacecraft designed to take tourists into space for short period of time. Many other companies are working on similar civilian space projects as well. Aerospace engineers also develop aircraft and projectiles. The U.S. military is always looking for a cutting edge in aircraft and missile technology.
Sally is a dedicated writer for StudentScholarships.org. She is an expert in Aerospace Engineering Scholarships, Financial Aid, Career Advice, and most other things college related.