Updating Results

Leidos Australia

4.3
  • 1,000 - 50,000 employees

2023 Graduate Procurement Analyst (Jan 2023)

Location details

On-site

  • Australia

    Australia

    • Australian Capital Territory

    • Victoria

Remote

Melbourne, Canberra

  • Any location

    Remote work

Location

Australian Capital Territory, Victoria, Melbourne, Canberra

Opportunity expired

Opportunity details

  • Opportunity typeGraduate Job or Program
  • SalaryAUD 71,000 - 76,000 / Year
  • Number of vacancies1 vacancy
  • Application open dateApply by 9 Apr 2022
  • Start dateStart date 29 Jan 2023

An average week for a Graduate Procurement Analyst could include a wide range of activities including:

  • A valued member of the Commercial & Procurement team, supporting business-wide procurement of goods and services;
  • Participate in procurement planning, raising purchase orders;
  • Working directly with a variety of suppliers and customers;
  • Support commercial teams in contracts management;
  • Utilise a variety of tools for day to day jobs as well as reporting and data analysis;
  • Provide support to the contracts administration function including reporting;
  • Develop and maintain close working relationships will internal & external stakeholders.

Graduates will be supported to develop their skills and knowledge specific to this role, to ensure they are able to contribute and reach their highest potential. As a Leidos graduate, you will be working on interesting and challenging projects and will take part in a range of training and development opportunities. To support you further throughout the graduate year, and your early career here at Leidos, you will also be assigned a mentor and buddy.

Work rights

The opportunity is available to applicants in any of the following categories.

Work light flag
Australia
Australian Citizen

Qualifications & other requirements

You should have or be completing the following to apply for this opportunity.

Degree or Certificate
Qualification level
Qualification level
Bachelor or higher
Study field
Study field (any)

Hiring criteria

  • Experience requirementNo experience required
  • Working rights
    Australian Citizen
  • Study fields
    Business & Management
  • Degree typesBachelor or higher
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Reviews

user
Graduate
Melbourne
5 months ago

Writing software, reviewing code changes, working with system services. Meetings, coffee, and free food occasionally.

user
Graduate
Sydney
5 months ago

As a systems engineer i am tasked with implementing engineering changes to consistent faults that occur within the systems that we look after. My role is very hands on and involves fault-finding and maintenance activities to ensure the systems are functional.

user
Graduate
Melbourne
6 months ago

I really love that the large majority of my days are spent on development, with minimal meetings each week. Although the days can become repetitive, generally the work is satisfying.

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About the employer

Leidos Logo

Leidos Australia

Rating

4.3

Number of employees

1,000 - 50,000 employees

Industries

Defence & Aerospace

Our mission is to Protect, and Advance the Australian way of Life and we do this through our work in Air, Defence, Intel and Cyber.

Pros and cons of working at Leidos Australia

Pros

  • Working arrangements are very flexible, I'm allowed to be autonomous in my work, and I feel that my contributions make an impact.

  • The culture is great... everyone gets along and works together well... we often do social things outside of work.

  • Extremely great at helping young starters improve their skills and gain the confidence to contribute to large projects.

  • Pretty good work-life balance, people are very understanding of personal commitments and are flexible around them.

  • You get to work on really cool projects that have a direct impact on the customer.

Cons

    • Too many meetings. Lots of jargon that is difficult to pick up initially.

    • Sometimes you can get bogged down in the paperwork and less on the fixing/designing new things however it's the same at every job.

    • Some meetings are unnecessary.

    • There's also not as much work-from-home flexibility, and high-security requirements can also be frustrating.

    • It doesn't seem very clear [what it takes to move up the ranks.