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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Aerospace company Leonardo drives diverse job applicants across Bristol

Based at Bristol Business Park, the aerospace, defence and security company has collaborated with STEM Returners

Dr Princess Udeze(Image: Leonardo )

Aerospace company Leonardo has announced ambitions to make its roles across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ more accessible to diverse job applicants.

The company, which has its defence and security headquarters based at Bristol Business Park, has collaborated with STEM Returners to hire candidates for six months of every year between April and October.

Following a successful pilot, Leonardo has chosen International Women in Engineering Day (INWED) to launch its new STEM Returner programme, which it is scaling up to hire 25 Returners before October. Whilst open to all, INWED provides an opportunity to highlight the careers available to women who are looking to move into a career with Leonardo, in engineering roles spanning systems, software, electronics and projects.

A year ago, Dr Princess Udeze came to a career crossroads when STEM Returners asked her to consider applying for a role as system engineer at aerospace engineering company Leonardo.

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Dr Udeze said: “I just thought ‘wow’ – this sounds so interesting, however, it was totally different to anything I had done in the past but I am incredibly excited to embark on this new chapter. Having obtained a PhD in medical engineering, I believe I possess a robust foundation in cutting-edge research, problem-solving, and critical thinking, which will be an essential transferrable skills. I had a first interview then another then got the job and was told the role would be a placement initially, but soon after they told me they had decided to keep me on so it became a permanent contract.”

She is now on the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP), the project led by the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, Italy and Japan to create a next generation combat aircraft by 2035, where she is exploring new engineering techniques alongside the other team members. GCAP will build on the substantial progress already made in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ by BAE Systems, Leonardo º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, MBDA º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, Rolls-Royce and the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Ministry of Defence who have been working in partnership since 2018 as Team Tempest to research, evaluate and develop a host of next generation future combat air systems capabilities.

Dr Udeze continued: “Get rid of the fear and just dive in. Never in my wildest imagination did I think I would work in the aerospace engineering. Every day for me seems to be new and that is the reason I enjoy it. Be prepared to learn and put in the time to research the new field you are working in, because that will help you to piece it all together in your mind. I realise now that my background in research for my degree and my PhD has been vital, as if I don’t know something I know how to ask for help or look for the information.