Production Manager
This role is for a Production Manager based in Dubai, managing the end-to-end lifecycle for luxury fashion and lifestyle brands. The incumbent will onboard and manage international manufacturers, coordinate with internal merchandising and design teams, and optimize production efficiency. Candidates require a background in apparel or fashion production with extensive experience managing suppliers in Asia and knowledge of GCC retail standards. This is a critical operational role focusing on private label production and vendor compliance.
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Experience
5+ years
Function
Operations
Work mode
Onsite, UAE
Company
Tier 3
What you will work on
This role is for a Production Manager based in Dubai, managing the end-to-end lifecycle for luxury fashion and lifestyle brands. The incumbent will onboard and manage international manufacturers, coordinate with internal merchandising and design teams, and optimize production efficiency. Candidates require a background in apparel or fashion production with extensive experience managing suppliers in Asia and knowledge of GCC retail standards. This is a critical operational role focusing on private label production and vendor compliance.
TAL's take
Role at a recruitment agency with unclear client identity and lack of professional domain transparency.
Well-defined production management scope within the fashion/retail industry.
Watchouts
- recruitment agency posting
- personal/generic email address contact
Must haves
- Bachelor’s degree in supply chain management, Business, or Fashion Production
- Minimum 5 years experience in production management in apparel, footwear, or lifestyle retail
- Strong knowledge of manufacturing processes, textiles, and product development cycles
- Experience managing international suppliers, specifically in Asia
- GCC retail/fashion industry exposure
About the company
Recruitment agency acting as an intermediary with a generic contact email address.
Posts mentioning The Talents Nation
Why nation fall
What is an extractive economy? An extractive economy is one where a small elite holds all the power political and economic and uses it to serve themselves. These people don’t build, they extract. Resources, labor, wealth, and even hope from the masses. The rest of the population gets scraps, if anything. The institutions are built not to include, but to exclude. Over time, this creates deep poverty, stagnation, and chaos. It suppresses talent, kills opportunity, and chokes any chance of a better future for the majority. And here’s where it gets darker. In extractive regimes, when governments fail to provide the basics like employment, clean water, good education, accessible healthcare then they don’t admit failure. They don’t reflect. Instead, they often manufacture or magnify external threats. It becomes their distraction weapon. Because when a nation is “on the brink of war,” suddenly your unemployment doesn’t feel that important. Your hunger, your lack of income, your unfulfilled dreams they all shrink in comparison to the idea that “our very nation is under threat.” It works like magic. And I’ve started noticing a pattern in our country. September 18, 2016 – Uri Attack Terrorists entered an Indian army camp and carried out a brutal attack. No one ever figured out how they got in, how they planned it, how it slipped through intelligence cracks. But right after that came the surgical strike, publicized to the point where it felt like Modi ji himself had led the team across the border. Six months later, UP elections happened. The BJP won with overwhelming support. The narrative was simple: “Yeh naya Hindustan hai, ghar mein ghus ke maarta hai.” “Modi hai toh mumkin hai.” ⸻ February 14, 2019 – Pulwama Attack 250 kg of RDX entered Indian soil. How? Nobody knows. A civilian car got near a military convoy and exploded. Again—no clear answers. But soon after came the Balakot air strike. Patriotism peaked. The government took center stage, framing the military operation as its own victory. May 2019 – General Elections. Guess what? BJP swept again. Why? Because Modi had “done the airstrike,” and Abhinandan was brought back like a national trophy. ⸻ March 2020 – COVID Crisis The country was bleeding. People dying in corridors. No hospital beds. No oxygen. Crematoriums overloaded. But the headlines? Sushant Singh Rajput’s suicide. Suddenly, we were all CBI agents. Rhea Chakraborty became the national villain. Weeks passed. Anger diverted. Public pain diluted. Final verdict? Who knows. But the damage was done—distraction achieved. ⸻ June 2020 – Galwan Valley Clash COVID deaths were rising. The system was crumbling. But suddenly, China was at the gates. Instead of focusing on saving lives, we were busy banning TikTok. Talking about boycotting Chinese goods. And just when everything felt like it was falling apart… Rafale jets arrived. News channels ran 24/7 coverage of fighter jets like they were Avengers joining the battlefield. Meanwhile, people were still dying without oxygen in hospitals. ⸻ Now again, another terrorist incident. Possibly a post-raid misreported as a terror attack. But the media is spinning it hard. Visuals. Footage. Narratives. Almost as if the intent is not to inform, but to influence. ⸻ Ram Mandir Timing The Ram Mandir verdict, unresolved for 30 years, suddenly got closure just before the 2024 elections. Fine. But what I can’t understand is why the inauguration happened before the temple was even completed. Shankaracharyas themselves said it’s inauspicious to do that. But it happened anyway. Just in time to stoke emotions ahead of the vote. ⸻ I’m not claiming anything. I’m not saying it’s all orchestrated. I don’t have the proof. But I see the pattern. Again and again. National tragedies turned into nationalist campaigns. Failures turned into war cries. Real questions silenced under the weight of “enemy threats.” Why is it that every time we’re close to an election, a tragedy happens, followed by a military response, and then a victory lap? I don’t know the answer. I’m just a guy observing. But I can’t unsee it now.
Today I found out about China's teardown and reverse engineering culture
If you look through recent headlines and viral tech forums, you can't miss the flood of teardown analysis reports being shared and dissected. Companies like TechInsights, Munro & Associates, iFixit, MarkLines, and even specialist Chinese platforms such as 52audio and Chongdiantou are producing deep, detailed reports that tear open the most hyped products—think iPhones, Teslas, Huawei Mate phones, or Xiaomi EVs—revealing their inner secrets for everyone to study. These teardowns aren't just about satisfying geek curiosity (though, let's admit, that’s a huge part—they're the ultimate engineering ASMR!). They're about unleashing a wave of competitive research, strategic sourcing, and hands-on education that's changing industries. China has transformed teardown analysis and reverse engineering from niche industry practice into a comprehensive national strategy embedded across manufacturing, R&D, and industrial policy. Major Chinese Teardown Platforms & Reports: 1) 52audio (我爱音频网): Over 365 teardown reports on audio products, smartwatches, wearables; comprehensive TWS earphone ecosystem analysis 2) Chongdiantou (充电头网): Specializes in GaN chargers, power stations, charging technology teardowns 3) MarkLines China: Automotive EV teardowns including BYD, Xiaomi SU7, Tesla analysis China's Strategic Reverse Engineering 1) Success Stories:High-Speed Rail (HSR): Reverse-engineered foreign rail technology, now world leader with 11,000+ km of track and global exports 2) Aerospace: Systematic reverse engineering of Soviet, European, American aircraft designs (J-11, J-15, J-16, J-20, J-35) 3) Semiconductors: Despite sanctions, achieved 7nm chip manufacturing through systematic teardown and reverse engineering efforts 4) EV Technology: BYD, Xiaomi leveraging teardown insights to create competitive domestic platforms What’s Inside a Viral Teardown Report? Imagine a document packed with: High-resolution photos of every layer, chip, and connector.Circuit diagrams painstakingly reconstructed from physical parts. Bills of materials (BoMs) and supplier lists—sometimes tracking origins to single factories. Physical measurements, manufacturing techniques, cost modeling, and even step-by-step chip microscopy.For example, the TechInsights teardown of the Huawei Mate 60 Pro dropped like a bombshell by exposing China’s 7nm chip manufacturing breakthrough, directly challenging western tech sanctions. Similarly, Munro’s Tesla Cybertruck teardown made waves by revealing its gigacast frame and unique motor architecture—raising alarms and ambitions among rival automakers. How Can India Do It? Set Up Dedicated Teardown Labs: Use multidisciplinary teams to reverse engineer hot products across electronics, automotive, telecom, and energy sectors. Leverage Local Manufacturing Relationships: India’s position in global supply chains (think smartphone assembly, auto components) can be turned into unique teardown research opportunities. Document and Share: Build open-access repositories (think Indian iFixit or TechInsights) to democratize and crowdsource reverse engineering. Investigative Research: Partner with VCs, academic institutions, and industry bodies to commission teardowns that answer strategic questions—where is the secret sauce, and who holds the keys? Indian firms and engineers have all the technical talent, component access, and scale needed to join this league—whether for competitive intelligence, original R&D, or education. For every Indian engineer or entrepreneur who’s ever wondered “How does that work?”—grab a screwdriver and a microscope.
Should I look for funding for my AI startup ?
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