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

Apply Now

Data Engineer (Microsoft D365 ERP)

Wakefield
1 week ago
Create job alert

An exciting opportunity has arisen for a Date Engineer to join a well-established manufacturing business based. This role is crucial in supporting the successful implementation and ongoing operation of Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations (D365 F&O).

You'll be responsible for migrating manufacturing-related data from a legacy system, ensuring its accuracy, and maintaining high-quality master data to support production processes.

Data Engineer - Key Responsibilities - D365, F&O, ERP, IT, Manufacturing

Cleanse and migrate manufacturing data (BOMs, routes, resources, inventory) into D365
Validate data accuracy and support test uploads
Maintain and update master data post-implementation
Monitor data integrity and provide first-line support to production staff
Document data processes and identify process improvements
Data Engineer - Requirements - D365, F&O, ERP, IT, Manufacturing

ERP experience (D365 F&O preferred)
Strong Excel skills (Power Query a plus)
Familiarity with manufacturing data and processes
Excellent analytical and problem-solving skills
Data Engineer, D365, F&O, ERP, IT, Manufacturing

If this role could appeal please do apply now

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Data Engineer

Data Engineer

Data Engineer

Data Engineer

Data Engineer

Data Engineer

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.

Why Data Engineering Careers in the UK Are Becoming More Multidisciplinary

For many years, data engineering in the UK meant designing pipelines, moving data between systems, and ensuring analysts had what they needed. Today, the field is expanding. With cloud platforms, machine learning, real-time analytics and the explosion of sensitive personal data, employers expect data engineers to do much more. Modern data engineering is no longer just about code and storage. It requires legal awareness, ethical judgement, psychological insight, linguistic clarity and human-centred design. These disciplines shape how data is collected, processed, explained and trusted. In this article, we’ll explore why data engineering careers in the UK are becoming more multidisciplinary, how law, ethics, psychology, linguistics & design now influence job descriptions, and what job-seekers & employers must do to thrive.

Data Engineering Team Structures Explained: Who Does What in a Modern Data Engineering Department

Data has become the lifeblood of modern organisations. Every sector in the UK—finance, healthcare, retail, government, technology—is increasingly relying on insights derived from data to drive decisions, deliver products, and improve operations. But raw data on its own isn’t enough. To make data useful, reliable, secure, and scalable, companies must build strong data engineering teams. If you’re recruiting for data engineering or seeking a role, understanding the structure of such a team and who does what is essential. This article breaks down the typical roles in a modern data engineering department, how they collaborate, required skills and qualifications, expected UK salaries, common challenges, and advice on structuring and growing a data engineering team.

Why the UK Could Be the World’s Next Data Engineering Jobs Hub

Data is now the lifeblood of the digital economy. Every industry—healthcare, finance, retail, manufacturing, transport, and government—relies on data to make decisions, power applications, and enable innovation. But raw data is only valuable if it can be collected, processed, cleaned, and made available for analysis. This is the role of data engineering. Over the past decade, data engineering has emerged as one of the fastest-growing areas of technology. Data engineers design and build the pipelines, platforms, and architectures that allow organisations to harness the power of big data, cloud services, artificial intelligence, and machine learning. Without them, the data economy would grind to a halt. The United Kingdom is uniquely placed to become the world’s next data engineering jobs hub. With its thriving tech ecosystem, leading universities, strong financial markets, and expanding data infrastructure, the UK already has many of the foundations needed. This article explores why the UK has this opportunity, what is driving demand, the career prospects for professionals, and what must happen for the UK to seize global leadership in data engineering jobs.