Full-Time

Technology Analyst

Sap Native Hana

Confirmed live in the last 24 hours

Airbus

Airbus

10,001+ employees

Manufactures commercial aircraft and aerospace systems

No salary listed

Mid, Senior

Company Does Not Provide H1B Sponsorship

Bengaluru, Karnataka, India

Category
Data Management
Data Engineering
Data & Analytics
Required Skills
Python
Git
SQL
Requirements
  • Graduate with 2-6 years of experience at least in Native HANA Development (HANA XSA)
  • Good experience in Developing HANA Objects (Table Functions, SQL, CV, Database Procedure, ...)
  • Job Scheduling and Performance Monitoring on SAP HANA
  • Good in performance analysis
  • Data visualization (SAC, Qlik…)
  • Knowledge on SLT/SDA
  • Preferable to have 1 year of experience in SAP ABAP development
  • Experience in working with code versioning => HANA Studio, Web IDE, GitHub
  • Ready to scale up new Technologies e.g. Bigdata, Cloud, Python
  • Developments on SD, PP, WM, eWM Modules would be an added advantage.
Responsibilities
  • Understand business processes and technical architecture of Airbus SAP landscape
  • Define/suggest SAP best practices and Golden rules
  • Perform deep technology root cause analysis and performance improvement
  • Perform source code auditing
  • Performance Tuning – ability to analyse and fine tune existing programs
  • Job Monitoring
  • Excellent communication skills as required to engage customers on requirements and delivery
  • Good problem solving and analytical skills
  • Customer facing skill. Worked with European customers
  • Develop the solution as per the requirements with good quality and performance
  • Apply SAP & HANA best practices and Golden rules and architect recommendation
  • Propose & develop the right ergonomic solution as per the requirements with good quality and performance.
Desired Qualifications
  • Preferable to have 1 year of experience in SAP ABAP development
  • Developments on SD, PP, WM, eWM Modules would be an added advantage.

Airbus manufactures a variety of aerospace products, including commercial aircraft, defense systems, and space technologies. Their aircraft are designed for airlines, while their defense systems cater to government needs, and their space technologies support space agencies. Airbus's products are developed through extensive research and development, allowing them to stay competitive in the aerospace market. They generate revenue through the design, production, and sale of these products, as well as through long-term contracts and after-sales services. A key aspect that sets Airbus apart from its competitors is its commitment to sustainable aviation solutions and digital transformation, which aim to improve operational efficiency and enhance customer satisfaction.

Company Size

10,001+

Company Stage

IPO

Headquarters

Blagnac, France

Founded

1970

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Airbus' new thermoplastic fuselage could reduce aircraft weight and production costs.
  • The VR Flight Trainer expansion meets growing demand for advanced avionics training.
  • Potential new A380 variant aligns with trends for larger, efficient aircraft.

What critics are saying

  • Boeing's restructuring may increase competition in cost and efficiency.
  • Gesture-based control systems may face integration challenges in the defense sector.
  • Thermoplastic fuselage designs could encounter regulatory hurdles before adoption.

What makes Airbus unique

  • Airbus leads in aerospace with innovations in thermoplastic fuselage designs.
  • The company is pioneering gesture-based control systems for fighter jets with Multiverse Computing.
  • Airbus is advancing sustainable aviation through partnerships like the one with the Philippines' DOTr.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Paid Vacation

Parental Leave

401(k) Retirement Plan

Employee Stock Purchase Plan

Professional Development Budget

Flexible Work Hours

Company News

Forbes
Oct 16th, 2024
Ryanair Chief Says Boeing To Blame For Lower Traffic Growth

Michael O'Leary became CEO of Ryanair in 1994 and has held the role ever since. NurPhoto via Getty ImagesRyanair’s CEO Michael O’Leary said that in his 30 years in the airline industry he had never seen capacity constraints like those he’s facing now.The longtime chief of Europe’s largest airline laid out the difficulties that Boeing’s delayed deliveries are creating for his carrier in an interview with Reuters Wednesday."We were supposed to get 20 deliveries before the end of December. They'll probably come now in January and February, and that's fine. We'll have them in time for next summer,” O’Leary said. “The big issue for Ryanair is we're due 30 aircraft in March, April, May and June of next year, and how many of those will we get?""I think we're clearly going to walk back our traffic growth for next year, because I don't think we're going to get all those 30 aircraft," O’Leary added.Boeing has been struggling in recent weeks after a strike by its largest union brought the production of commercial aircraft to a virtual standstill. Negotiations have reportedly reached a stalemate.Boeing’s CEO said late last week the company was planning to cut 17,000 jobs as part of a restructuring aimed reduced costs, and the plane maker said this week it would raise up to $25 billion through stock and debt offerings along with a $10 billion credit agreement.The U.S

Aero-mag
Oct 15th, 2024
Airbus unveils new thermoplastic aircraft fuselage design

Airbus unveils new thermoplastic aircraft fuselage design.

The Mirror
Oct 12th, 2024
New plane design launching in 2025 could be 'gamechanger' for hand luggage rules

In place of the current overhead storage bins which are only big enough to lie a wheelie-case flat - meaning a lot of room is waste above it - Airbus has unveiled the 'Airspace L Bins'.

Combat Aircraft
Oct 11th, 2024
Airbus, Multiverse to build gesture-based control system for fighters

Airbus Defence and Space is collaborating with Spain-headquartered Multiverse Computing to develop advanced gesture recognition software for future fighter aircraft, leveraging quantum-inspired algorithms and Large Language Models (LLMs).

Aviation Week
Oct 9th, 2024
Airbus Working With Spanish AI Firm On Future Fighter Avionics

Airbus has selected Spanish artificial intelligence company Multiverse Computing to help develop a new approach to avionics interaction for next-generation combat aircraft.