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Industrial Estimator

Job in Grand Forks, Grand Forks County, North Dakota, 58203, USA
Listing for: ICS, Inc (Industrial Contract Services)
Full Time position
Listed on 2026-02-16
Job specializations:
  • Engineering
    Mechanical Engineer, Manufacturing Engineer, Process Engineer, Operations Manager
Salary/Wage Range or Industry Benchmark: 60000 - 80000 USD Yearly USD 60000.00 80000.00 YEAR
Job Description & How to Apply Below

Location:

Grand Forks, ND. Department:
Estimating / Project Management.

Reports To:

Estimating Manager or Director of Operations

Summary

This is a high‑impact role at the front end of every major decision we make. As an Industrial Estimator focused on food processing/Manufacturing/Industrial projects, you don’t just “run numbers” – you shape which projects we pursue, how we price them, and how we build them. Your work helps bring new production lines, safer plants, and innovative food and Manufacturing products to life.

If you enjoy solving complex problems, understanding how things are built, and having your work directly influence real‑world projects, this is a powerful seat to be in.

Why This Role Is a Great Opportunity
  • You sit at the center of strategy:
    Your estimates directly influence which projects we chase and how we win them.
  • You see the full picture:
    You work with engineering, project management, operations, vendors, and clients – not in a narrow silo.
  • Your work becomes real:
    You’ll visit facilities, see your projects in the field, and watch your estimates turn into steel, pipe, and equipment.
  • You’re in a growth lane:
    This role is an ideal platform for future paths in senior estimating, project management, operations leadership, or business development.
Role Mission

Your mission is to turn drawings, ideas, and early conversations into clear, trusted cost models that give leadership the confidence to say “yes” to the right projects. You do this by deeply understanding scopes, carefully quantifying equipment and materials, and realistically forecasting the labor and logistics needed to install complex systems in demanding food‑processing environments.

How You Create Value

You look at a set of plans and immediately start visualizing the finished line or facility: where the conveyors run, how the tanks are supported, how the trades move through the space, and what it really takes to install everything safely in an operating plant. You convert that understanding into accurate, well‑structured estimates that:

  • Help the company win profitable work
  • Give project teams realistic budgets and targets
  • Build trust with clients who depend on solid cost information
  • Reduce surprises in the field by aligning expectations early
What You’ll Do
  • Dive into projects early:
    Review engineering drawings, P&IDs, layouts, scopes, and RFQs to fully understand project intent and constraints.
  • Turn plans into quantities:
    Quantify equipment and materials across mechanical, Manufacturing process, and structural scopes – conveyors, tanks, mixers, pumps, platforms, utilities, piping, supports, and more.
  • Forecast the labor to build it:
    Determine the hours and trades needed to install all equipment, considering sequencing, productivity, shutdown windows, access, and safety/food‑safety/MFG constraints.
  • Collaborate across the business:
    Work closely with project managers, engineers, vendors, and subcontractors to clarify scope, confirm technical details, and develop competitive pricing.
  • Build complete cost pictures:
    Develop full estimates that include materials, equipment, labor, subcontractors, indirect costs, and allowances where appropriate.
  • Support early‑stage decisions:
    Prepare conceptual and budgetary estimates when information is limited, helping clients and internal teams understand options and tradeoffs.
  • Add value, not just cost:
    Identify value‑engineering ideas – alternate equipment, smarter installation methods, or phasing approaches – that reduce cost or risk while maintaining performance and sanitary design.
  • Strengthen our “cost intelligence”:
    Maintain and refine estimating databases, unit rates, and historical cost records so we get sharper on every project.
  • Communicate clearly:
    Present your assumptions, risks, and recommendations in ways that non‑estimators can understand and act on.
Your Work in Context

You’ll be involved from the first “could we do this?” conversation through to the final proposal. You’ll help shape bid strategies, influence project planning, and support the handoff to project management once a job is awarded. When projects are in the field, your work will be the benchmark that teams use to measure performance and…

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