Profile
An independent engineer's career
Twenty-five years of electrical & instrumentation engineering as an independent — no employment, no umbrella structure. Assignments follow one another, clients come back: that is the simplest validation there is. The career spans all levels of responsibility — site supervision, commissioning, multi-discipline coordination, project management — on industrial sites in twelve countries.
A continuous industrial spectrum
Most careers settle into one sector and stay there: recruitment pools, clients and references naturally push in that direction. This career was built differently — not a jump between two separate worlds, but a continuous trajectory through sectors: power, oil & gas, chemicals, water, packaging, each experience preparing and enriching the next. At the two ends of that spectrum, two industrial cultures practised in depth:
- Heavy process industries (steelmaking, cement): high power, demanding environments, multi-discipline coordination, the ability to start up an installation under difficult conditions.
- GMP/FDA-regulated environments (pharma, biotech, aerospace, special machines): traceability, documentary validation, regulatory qualification, written proof.
This breadth produces a commissioning practice that is both solidly documented (heritage of regulated environments) and operationally robust (heritage of heavy process) — two qualities the market tends to keep separate. It makes for credibility with a steelworks site manager as much as with a pharma quality manager, and ease in every sector in between.
Integration capability
Entering an engineering office or project team, rapidly absorbing the technical context, identifying the E&I scope within the whole, aligning with process, mechanical, automation and HSE teams, then delivering: this process, repeated across dozens of multidisciplinary teams, is a skill in its own right. It is what explains the continuity of the career across sectors and countries.
Today: Remote Engineering
This field experience is the foundation that makes remote direction reliable: you can only validate correctly at a distance what you have practised extensively on site. The posture is remote-first by priority; on-site presence remains a capability, deployed selectively when the context warrants it.
Working languages: French, English, Turkish — written and spoken, in all three directions.