Associate Electrical Engineer – Oxford (Operational Assets)
Salary: £52,000 – £65,750 + £4,560 Allowance + Travel Allowance
Location: Oxford
Category: Electrical Engineering | Full Time
Our client has an outstanding senior leadership role for an Associate Electrical Engineer specialising in operational assets, existing buildings, and building performance. This is a client-facing, work-winning, team-guiding position focused on delivering strategic, technical, and commercial value across a broad portfolio.
The Opportunity
You will secure and lead projects, shape delivery strategy, support team growth, and provide high-level technical oversight across decarbonisation, refurbishment, asset management, feasibility reporting, and performance-led engineering.
Key Responsibilities
Lead and win new work across the operational assets portfolio
Support regional resource planning, workload planning and delivery strategy
Act as a senior client partner, managing expectations and maintaining long-term relationships
Provide leadership, guidance and development for engineers across the team
Coordinate with other disciplines to deliver complex multi-disciplinary projects
Undertake technical design, detailed specifications, site inspections and commissioning reviews
Produce feasibility studies, condition surveys, technical due diligence and investigative reports
Develop decarbonisation strategies, energy reduction plans and operational improvements
Support recruitment, training and future team succession planning
What You Need
Chartered or working towards chartership
Extensive experience with existing buildings, refurbishment and operational assets
Strong knowledge of electrical systems and solid understanding of secondary disciplines
Strong knowledge of data, metering and building performance
Proven capability in work-winning and building/leading teams
Excellent communication, interpersonal and influencing skills
Strong organisational and planning skills, with the ability to work to demanding timescales
Experience in the Science & Research sector is essential