Maritime lifting systems and electrical control solutions for offshore operations
Seaonics Polska manufactures specialized handling and lifting equipment plus electrical control systems for offshore and maritime environments. The engineering-heavy hiring footprint (9 of 12 recent posts) focused on crane design, standardization, and safety functions reflects active product development — a shift from legacy hardware toward modularized, standardized crane architectures. Pain points around component standardization and spare-part procurement suggest internal operations scaling faster than supply-chain processes.
Seaonics Polska is a Poland-based subsidiary of the Ålesund-headquartered Seaonics group, founded in 2011 and operating at 51–200 employees. The company specializes in advanced control and power systems for maritime lifting and handling applications, serving offshore energy customers globally. Core business spans mechanical crane design, electrical system integration, and related lifting solutions for subsea and surface operations. The stack reveals a hardware-centric engineering workflow: CAD (AutoCAD, Inventor), simulation (Ansys), PDM (Vault), and project management (Primavera P6, Jira, IFS, SAP) — tools typical of discrete manufacturing with long design cycles and strict compliance requirements.
Engineering and design: Autodesk Inventor, AutoCAD, Ansys, Vault. Operations and ERP: SAP, IFS, Primavera P6. Collaboration: Jira, SharePoint, Microsoft Office. No recent technology adoptions or migrations detected.
New crane designs and engineering changes, standardization of crane components and safety functions, product standardization initiatives, and cross-functional continuous improvement. Supply chain and spare-part procurement optimization are also active priorities.
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