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The difference between industrial and manufacturing engineering changes according to the sector of as industry and the country of origin. An American owned company based in another country uses American terms that are familiar with the management team. In some cases these terms are taken to mean one and the same thing and are used interchangeably. However there are clear distinctions which can help a person to use the most appropriate term. There are instances where it is very easy to classify a job to be one or the other relative to the industry or job description. A problem arises when a role is at the middle of the overlap of the two disciplines making it difficult to make a correct term of defining the job. This together with continuous improvement in engineering, production and increase in company size, calls for use of more descriptive terms. This is because there is a shift of focus on an individual which necessitates use of concise terms.
A manufacturing engineer role rotates around reporting of production data to management and working together with the supervisors. They are only concerned about the day to day activities where the industrial focuses on the long term ones. An industrial engineer on the other hand is connected to the continuous process associated with unstructured product contrary to the production of distinct products with a specific shape. If the company produces goods in bulk then manufacturing engineer is the most appropriate term to use. Nevertheless one should not confuse industrial engineering with industrial design. Unlike Industrial engineering industrial designer require more artistic and human skills.
Industrial engineering is a branch of that is involved a myriad activities. This includes designing, developing and implementing systems of machines, humans, and information to provide services and goods to
References: Pang, P. N. T. (2004). Essentials of manufacturing engineering management. New York: Universe. Zhou, Z., Wang, H., & Lou, P. (2010). Manufacturing intelligence for industrial engineering: Methods for system self-organization, learning, and adaptation. Hershey, PA: Engineering Science Reference. . ----------------------- Industrial engineering Manufacturing engineering