Process Engineer

Process Engineer – optimising how flavours are made

A Process Engineer in the flavour industry focuses on how flavour products are manufactured, ensuring processes are efficient, consistent and scalable. They play a key role in taking new technologies or formulations from development into reliable large-scale production.

Working as a Process Engineer requires a strong understanding of chemical or food manufacturing processes, combined with analytical thinking and practical problem-solving. These professionals help improve production efficiency, maintain quality and support innovation across flavour manufacturing.

Typical responsibilities include:

  • Designing and improving manufacturing processes for flavour production
  • Scaling up processes from laboratory or pilot trials to full manufacturing
  • Monitoring and optimising parameters such as temperature, pressure, mixing and reaction time
  • Troubleshooting production issues and identifying ways to improve yield and efficiency
  • Working closely with R&D, production, quality and engineering teams
  • Supporting the introduction of new technologies, ingredients or manufacturing methods
Process engineers are a key role in flavour

Career path

Process engineering careers in the flavour industry often progress through several stages.

Graduate Process Engineer / Process Technologist
Supporting process development projects, analysing production data and assisting with trials and optimisation work.

Process Engineer
Leading process improvement initiatives, managing scale-up projects and ensuring manufacturing processes are efficient, safe and reliable.

Senior Process Engineer / Process Development Manager
Leading large-scale process innovation projects, mentoring junior engineers and helping shape manufacturing strategy.

Some engineers specialise further in areas such as process scale-up, automation, continuous improvement or sustainable manufacturing.

What qualifications help?

A degree in chemical engineering, process engineering, chemistry, food science or a related discipline is typically required.

Hands-on experience with manufacturing environments, pilot plant trials or process modelling can be particularly valuable. Knowledge of food manufacturing standards and Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) is also beneficial in flavour production environments.

Additional training in areas such as Lean manufacturing, Six Sigma, data analysis or process control systems can help engineers improve efficiency and progress their careers.

Case Study: What My Job as a Process Technologist Involves – James’ Journey in Flavour Production

To see what life as a process technologist is really like, read our Case Study: James Ross of Lionel Hitchen Ltd and watch our video interview with James, where he shares what a day in the life of a process technologist looks like. From supporting production and troubleshooting processes to working on longer-term innovation projects.