Be at the heart of actionFly remote-controlled drones into enemy territory to gather vital information.

Apply Now

Business Intelligence Developer

FORT
Manchester
1 day ago
Create job alert

This range is provided by FORT. Your actual pay will be based on your skills and experience — talk with your recruiter to learn more.

Base pay range

Business Intelligence Developer (Power BI)

Manchester – Hybrid (2 days on-site)

We’re partnered with a fast-growing technology business that is undergoing a major transformation programme to modernise its data and analytics capabilities. They’re looking for a Business Intelligence Developer who can play a key role in shaping the way data is used across the organisation.

This is an opportunity to get involved in a large-scale, complex data environment and make a tangible impact on how insights drive decision-making at a global level.

What you’ll be doing
  • Designing and developing Power BI dashboards and reports that provide meaningful insight and data storytelling for senior stakeholders.
  • Working with large, complex datasets from multiple sources, ensuring they are queried, modelled, and optimised for reporting.
  • Collaborating with engineers and analysts to develop data pipelines and models that feed enterprise-level reporting solutions.
  • Supporting the ongoing transformation programme, helping to break down legacy reporting structures and introduce modern BI practices.
  • Partnering closely with commercial, finance, and operational teams to ensure reporting is aligned with business objectives.
What we’re looking for
  • Strong experience with Power BI (end-to-end report development, DAX, Power Query).
  • Proficiency in SQL with the ability to query, transform, and optimise large datasets.
  • Experience working in environments where data is drawn from multiple complex sources (e.g. data warehouses, data lakes, or cloud platforms).
  • A good understanding of data modelling, ETL, and governance.
  • Strong stakeholder engagement skills - confident presenting insights and simplifying complex data.
  • Be part of a major transformation project where your input will shape the future of BI and reporting in the organisation.
  • Work in a modern data stack environment with exposure to cloud technologies and large-scale enterprise data.
  • A role with both technical depth and business visibility - your work will be seen and valued across the company.
  • Hybrid working in Manchester with a collaborative, forward-thinking data team.
Seniority level

Mid-Senior level

Employment type

Full-time

Job function

Information Technology

Industries

Technology, Information and Media and Software Development


#J-18808-Ljbffr

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Business Intelligence Developer

Business Intelligence Developer

Business Intelligence Developer

Business Intelligence Developer

Business Intelligence Developer

Senior Business Intelligence Developer

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Data Science Recruitment Trends 2025 (UK): What Job Seekers Need To Know About Today’s Hiring Process

Summary: UK data science hiring has shifted from title‑led CV screens to capability‑driven assessments that emphasise rigorous problem framing, high‑quality analytics & modelling, experiment/causality, production awareness (MLOps), governance/ethics, and measurable product or commercial impact. This guide explains what’s changed, what to expect in interviews & how to prepare—especially for product/data scientists, applied ML scientists, decision scientists, econometricians, growth/marketing analysts, and ML‑adjacent data scientists supporting LLM/AI products. Who this is for: Product/decision/data scientists, applied ML scientists, econometrics & causal inference specialists, experimentation leads, analytics engineers crossing into DS, ML generalists with strong statistics, and data scientists collaborating with platform/MLOps teams in the UK.

Why Data Science Careers in the UK Are Becoming More Multidisciplinary

Data science once meant advanced statistics, machine learning models and coding in Python or R. In the UK today, it has become one of the most in-demand professions across sectors — from healthcare to finance, retail to government. But as the field matures, employers now expect more than technical modelling skills. Modern data science is multidisciplinary. It requires not just coding and algorithms, but also legal knowledge, ethical reasoning, psychological insight, linguistic clarity and human-centred design. Data scientists are expected to interpret, communicate and apply data responsibly, with awareness of law, human behaviour and accessibility. In this article, we’ll explore why data science careers in the UK are becoming more multidisciplinary, how these five disciplines intersect with data science, and what job-seekers & employers need to know to succeed in this transformed field.

Data Science Team Structures Explained: Who Does What in a Modern Data Science Department

Data science is one of the most in-demand, dynamic, and multidisciplinary areas in the UK tech and business landscape. Organisations from finance, retail, health, government, and beyond are using data to drive decisions, automate processes, personalise services, predict trends, detect fraud, and more. To do that well, companies don’t just need good data scientists; they need teams with clearly defined roles, responsibilities, workflows, collaboration, and governance. If you're aiming for a role in data science or recruiting for one, understanding the structure of a data science department—and who does what—can make all the difference. This article breaks down the key roles, how they interact across the lifecycle of a data science project, what skills and qualifications are typical in the UK, expected salary ranges, challenges, trends, and how to build or grow an effective team.