Robotic Technician (Construction)
Also posted as Also posted as: Robotic Technician (Construction) II, Sr Robotic Technician (Construction), Technician II
A robotic technician in construction installs, maintains, and troubleshoots robotic and automated equipment used on job sites and in construction-fabrication environments. The role combines mechanical, electrical, controls, and software-level troubleshooting to keep emerging construction-automation systems working reliably.
Below: what it pays, what you'd do, the skills you need, and how to become one.

The role profile
Everything you need to know about this role, the same details employers use to post openings and colleges use to build training.
How much does it pay?
Explore the core responsibilities of this role, from daily operations and equipment handling to safety, quality, and performance requirements.
Maintain robot systems
Service manipulators, AMRs, and end-of-arm tooling on schedule.
Troubleshoot faults
Diagnose errors across mechanics, electronics, and robot software.
Teach and tune
Adjust robot programs, paths, and parameters for reliable performance.
Restore job-site readiness
Return downed robotic equipment to service quickly and document the issue so site work can continue safely.
What skills do you need?
Three core skills sit at the heart of this role. You can learn all of them through short, hands-on training.
Robotics
Programming, maintaining, and troubleshooting industrial and mobile robots.
Controls
Troubleshooting and tuning the control systems that automate equipment and processes.
Troubleshooting
Isolating root causes fast using a systematic, test-driven approach.
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