Overview
Mechatronics sits at the intersection of mechanical, electrical, and software engineering. Employers hiring junior mechatronics engineers want to see that you can work across all three domains, not just specialise in one. PLC programming, sensor integration, embedded systems, and CAD modelling are the core technical skills. What sets strong candidates apart is evidence of building working systems, whether in industry or through project work.
This resume belongs to Ryan Patel, a BEng Mechatronics graduate from the University of Leeds who completed a Year in Industry at Siemens in Congleton. He programmed 4 PLC control sequences in TIA Portal, integrated sensors on a packaging line that processed 1,200 units per hour, and assisted with the commissioning of 2 automated stations. His final year project involved building a robotic arm with 4 degrees of freedom, controlled by an Arduino Mega.
What Makes This Resume Work
PLC programming is described with sequence counts and context. Rather than stating "experience with PLC programming," Ryan specifies 4 control sequences in TIA Portal on a live packaging line. This tells the employer he has worked with industrial-grade equipment, not just simulation software.
Commissioning experience is rare for graduates. Being involved in the commissioning of 2 automated stations means Ryan has seen a system go from installation through to handover. This is valuable experience that most graduates lack, and it signals readiness for site-based work from day one.
The final year project demonstrates full-system integration. Building a 4-DOF robotic arm from scratch, including mechanical design in SolidWorks, circuit design, and Arduino programming, shows the breadth of skills that define mechatronics. The fact that it achieved positional accuracy within 2mm gives a measurable quality metric.
Key Takeaways
Junior mechatronics engineers should show breadth across mechanical, electrical, and software domains. Reference the specific PLCs, microcontrollers, and CAD tools you have used, and describe the systems you worked on with throughput or performance figures. Include any commissioning or site work, as this is highly valued. Professional body membership through IMechE or IET (or both) demonstrates cross-disciplinary commitment.

























































































































































































































































