Platform Analyst for Signavio
Takeda is seeking a Platform Analyst to support their multi-year SAP S/4HANA transformation program. You will serve as the subject matter expert for the Signavio platform, owning process intelligence use cases and data modeling. The role requires building analytical assets and ensuring data quality for complex business processes like Order-to-Cash. You will bridge business requirements and data engineering to drive process excellence across the global organization.
50k new jobs listed every day. Install TAL to find more jobs like this.

Experience
4-6 years
Function
Engineering
Work mode
Onsite, India
Company
Tier 2
What you will work on
Takeda is seeking a Platform Analyst to support their multi-year SAP S/4HANA transformation program. You will serve as the subject matter expert for the Signavio platform, owning process intelligence use cases and data modeling. The role requires building analytical assets and ensuring data quality for complex business processes like Order-to-Cash. You will bridge business requirements and data engineering to drive process excellence across the global organization.
TAL's take
Solid role at a large global pharmaceutical firm focusing on enterprise process transformation, though the tech stack is niche.
Very clear responsibilities focused on Signavio platform management and data analytics within a specific SAP transformation program.
Must haves
- 4-6 years of experience in process excellence data management and analytics
- Experience with ERP systems like SAP, Oracle, or Microsoft
- Strong proficiency in SQL and ETL processes
- Understanding of BPM technology and process management concepts
- Bachelor's degree in Computer Science, IT, or Engineering
Tools and skills
Nice to have: fluxicon, celonis, aris process performance manager, qpr, java, python, r.
About the company
Global pharmaceutical company with significant business operations, but not a tech-native Tier 1 firm.
Posts mentioning Takeda
Trump Triumphs Over Harris in Historic Election
- The 2024 presidential election saw Donald Trump defeating Kamala Harris, sparking discussions on political divides. - Astead Herndon of the New York Times highlights the gap between political elites and the public as a key takeaway. - Kamala Harris, in her post-election remarks, urged supporters to stay empowered despite the loss. Source: [Npr](https://www.npr.org/2024/11/27/1215355310/code-switch-little-r-racism), [New York Post](https://nypost.com/2024/11/26/us-news/kamala-harris-consoles-supporters-in-first-public-remarks-since-concession-speech-it-feels-heavy/)
Masters in the US vs. Switching Jobs – Need Advice
YOE: 4 (2 in Frontend Dev, 2 in UX/Product Design) Current Role: Accenture Looking for: Product Design / UX Design Roles Hey folks, I’m currently stuck at a crossroads and could really use some perspective. I’ve been trying to transition into UX/Product Design from a frontend dev background. I technically have 2 years of YOE in UX, but I haven’t been able to work on solid, real-world design projects. My team at Accenture barely gets design-focused work, so I often end up getting pushed into random support roles—mostly Excel-based tasks just so it doesn't look like I’m on the bench. It's frustrating and honestly demotivating. My current monthly takeaway is a little less than 45k, which feels too low for my experience and skillset. I’m grateful to be employed, but I’m not growing in the direction I want. I recently got admitted to UT Austin for Fall ‘25. UTA is known to be a really good uni and a little easy on the pockets as their RA/TA postions are known to waive off full/partial tuition for the semester. I know the job market isn’t great globally, and going for a master’s is a huge financial and life decision. But I’m also tired of being stuck. I’m weighing two options: 1. Try switching jobs now and hope to land something in UX/Product Design 2. Go for the master’s and try to fully pivot into UX in the US (and other places, I'll be applying everywhere lol) , hopefully the market has course corrected or atleast become a little better than now Would love to hear from anyone who’s been in a similar spot. Is it worth holding out for a better role here, or should I go all-in on the master's?
Need your Experience Takeaways
I am a recent graduate with a BTECH CSE degree working at a very early age start-up as software developer this seems very normal but now that's a catch I am working from past 5 months and now I am started feeling stuck and overwhelmed like for tasks I am getting, deadlines and office culture like I am feeling I am not right fit and can be fired at any point even if I am doing things okay not best but I am doing average. What should I do ???