Audio Machine Learning Engineer

Covent Garden
2 months ago
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

AI Governance Specialist

Senior Forensic Data Analytics Manager

Head of AI Governance

Maintenance Engineer

Finance Business Partner

Operations Manager

Audio Machine Learning Engineer

A growing technology team is developing a new generation of intelligent, audio-driven products designed to interpret real-world acoustic environments and generate meaningful insight. As development accelerates, they are seeking an Audio Machine Learning Engineer to shape how sound is analysed, classified, and translated into useful information across edge and cloud platforms.

The Opportunity Working alongside embedded, hardware, and software specialists, you will contribute to the full lifecycle of audio intelligence, from dataset strategy and model design through to optimisation and deployment.

The role offers genuine ownership and the chance to influence core technology within a product-focused engineering environment.

Required:

Core experience

Strong grounding in audio machine learning or applied signal processing
Experience training and evaluating models using modern ML tooling
Awareness of real-world acoustic challenges such as noise, reverberation, and variability
Comfort working in a small, fast-moving engineering team
Likely a PhD or MSc + some industry experience
Beneficial

Edge or embedded ML optimisation
Audio feature extraction or DSP knowledge
Postgraduate study in a relevant technical discipline
Experience with sensing, monitoring, or real-world data systems

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Where to Advertise Robotics Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Advertising robotics jobs in the UK requires a different approach to most technical hiring. The candidate pool spans mechanical engineers, software developers, controls specialists, computer vision researchers and systems integrators — a multidisciplinary mix that general job boards are poorly equipped to reach. The strongest robotics candidates are often embedded in research groups, defence programmes or advanced manufacturing environments, and move between roles through specialist networks and industry events rather than mainstream platforms. This guide, published by RoboticsJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise robotics roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about hiring across different role types.

New Robotics Employers to Watch in 2026: UK and Global Companies Transforming Automation Careers

Robotics is moving rapidly from factory floors into healthcare, logistics, agriculture, autonomous systems, and consumer products. As automation becomes embedded in everyday life, companies are investing in robots that operate alongside humans, analyse environments in real time, and learn from data. In 2026, demand for robotics engineers, software developers, system integrators, and AI specialists continues to surge. For professionals exploring opportunities on www.RoboticsJobs.co.uk , understanding the employers that are scaling, winning contracts, securing investment, or expanding into the UK market is crucial. This article highlights top robotics employers to watch in 2026, spanning innovative startups, high‑growth scale‑ups, and established global technology leaders with strong UK presence.

How Many Robotics Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Robotics Job?

If you’re pursuing a career in robotics, it can feel like the list of tools you should learn never ends. One job advert asks for ROS, another mentions Gazebo, another wants experience with Python, Linux, C++, RobotStudio, MATLAB/Simulink, perception stacks, control frameworks, real-time OS, vision libraries — and that’s just scratching the surface. With so many frameworks, languages and platforms, it’s no wonder robotics job seekers feel overwhelmed. But here’s the honest truth most recruiters won’t say explicitly: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every tool — they hire you because you can apply the right tools to solve real robotics problems reliably and explain your reasoning clearly. Tools matter — but only in service of outcomes. So the real question isn’t how many tools you should know, but which tools you should master and why. For most robotics roles, the answer is significantly fewer — and far more focused — than you might assume. This article breaks down what employers really expect, which tools are core, which are role-specific, and how to focus your learning so you look capable, confident, and ready to contribute from day one.