Systems engineers at Sandia have the opportunity to contribute technically and programmatically in the development of our many breakthrough products. Systems engineers have responsibilities across the entire product life cycle, giving them a unique, hands-on work experience.
Systems engineers work with business development staff members to create the conceptual design of new product offerings. This entails developing concept architectures of the system, evaluating if commercial off-the-shelf products already exist or if new products will have to be developed, and conducting cost-benefit analyses of different candidate configurations. During proposal development, systems engineers help refine the conceptual design into a solution that addresses specific customer requests.
Once a contract has been awarded, systems engineers use software tools to assist in understanding all customer expectations and establishing a system for assigning responsibility to individual team members. During the development phase of the product, our systems engineers help resolve and manage risks as they are identified. Sandia systems engineers also help ensure the integrity of program configuration baselines and how these obligations are verified.
Key areas for systems engineers at Sandia
Conceptual design
Requirements definition and analysis
Architectural design
Proposal development
Modeling and prototyping
Integration and test
Risk management
Configuration management
All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, age, disability, or veteran status and any other protected class under state or federal law.
Sandia invites you to review the Equal Employment Opportunity posters which include EEO is the Law, EEO is the Law Poster Supplement, and Pay Transparency Nondiscrimination Provision.
Sandia is a drug-free workplace. As a national laboratory funded by a U.S. government agency, we are subject to federal laws regarding illegal drug use. Illegal use of a controlled substance, including marijuana even in places where it does not violate state law, may impact your ability to obtain and/or maintain a Department of Energy security clearance, and may result in the withdrawal of an employment offer or termination of employment.