Maximo Solution Owner and Architect
Job Summary
Work Schedule
Standard (Mon-Fri)Environmental Conditions
OfficeJob Description
As part of the Thermo Fisher Scientific team youll discover meaningful work that makes a positive impact on a global scale. Join our colleagues in bringing our Mission to life every single day to enable our customers to make the world healthier cleaner and safer. We provide our global teams with the resources needed to achieve individual career goals while helping to take science a step beyond by developing solutions for some of the worlds toughest challenges like protecting the environment making sure our food is safe or helping find cures for cancer.
DESCRIPTION:
The Maximo Solution Architect is responsible for leading the end-to-end technical architecture and delivery of IBM Maximo solutions at Thermo Fisher. This role defines the overall solution design ensures alignment with enterprise architecture standards and drives technical excellence across all project phases.
The Solution Architect works closely with stakeholders application specialists and technical teams to translate business needs into scalable secure and high-performing solutions. They provide leadership across multiple areas guiding design decisions integration strategies and deployment approaches. This role is accountable for ensuring successful technical delivery mitigating risks and establishing best practices for MAS implementations.
REQUIREMENTS:
Bachelors degree in IT Engineering or related field
8 years of experience with IBM Maximo / MAS including multi-module implementations
Strong expertise across MAS applications (Manage Monitor Health Mobile etc.)
Proven experience leading large-scale EAM implementations
Deep understanding of system architecture integrations and cloud deployments (RHOS preferred)
Experience with enterprise integration patterns (APIs middleware)
Strong leadership and stakeholder management skills
Required Experience:
Staff IC
About Company
Electron microscopes reveal hidden wonders that are smaller than the human eye can see. They fire electrons and create images, magnifying micrometer and nanometer structures by up to ten million times, providing a spectacular level of detail, even allowing researchers to view single a ... View more