AI Engineer

London
3 days ago
Create job alert

Job Title: AI Engineer / Data & AI Scientist (LLM, Generative AI, Python)

We are recruiting for an AI Engineer / Data & AI Scientist to join a high-impact programme building next-generation conversational AI and generative AI platforms. This role focuses on developing production-grade LLM applications, agent-based AI systems and RAG pipelines used in large-scale customer-facing environments.

This is an opportunity to work on advanced AI assistant and conversational AI technology, building scalable multi-agent architectures and generative search systems using modern AI frameworks.

Key Responsibilities

  • Design and build LLM-powered applications using Python and Generative AI frameworks

  • Develop RAG (Retrieval Augmented Generation) pipelines and AI orchestration workflows

  • Build and deploy agent-based AI systems using tools such as LangGraph, CrewAI or similar frameworks

  • Engineer scalable AI infrastructure across Azure and GCP environments

  • Implement prompt engineering, model evaluation and LLMOps monitoring

  • Develop AI products including conversational AI assistants, summarisation tools and generative search capabilities

    Required Skills

  • Strong Python development experience

  • Experience building production LLM or Generative AI applications

  • Knowledge of RAG pipelines, prompt engineering and vector search

  • Experience with agentic AI frameworks (LangGraph, CrewAI or similar)

  • Exposure to LLMOps, model evaluation or monitoring

  • Experience with cloud AI platforms such as Azure AI or Vertex AI (GCP)

    Desirable Experience

  • Conversational AI or AI assistant platforms

  • Multi-agent architectures

  • Responsible AI, AI ethics or guardrail design

  • Agile / Scrum environments

    This is an excellent opportunity for an AI Engineer, Machine Learning Engineer, LLM Engineer or Generative AI Engineer looking to build production AI systems and next-generation conversational AI platforms.

    Apply now to work on cutting-edge generative AI and LLM technologies

Related Jobs

View all jobs

AI Engineer

AI Engineer / Machine Learning Engineer

AI Engineer - AI Foundry

AI Engineer - Deep Learning - Python - Remote - Outside IR35

Trainee AI Engineer Placement Programme

Trainee AI Engineer Placement Programme

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.

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.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Robotics Job Applications (UK Guide)

Robotics is one of the most dynamic, interdisciplinary fields in technology — blending mechanical systems, embedded software, controls, perception (AI/vision), modelling, simulation and systems integration. Hiring managers in this space are highly selective because robotics teams need people who can solve real-world problems under constraints, work across disciplines, and deliver safe, reliable systems. And here’s the reality: hiring managers do not read every word of your CV. Like in many tech domains, they scan quickly — often forming a judgement in the first 10–20 seconds. In robotics, those first signals are especially important because the work is complex and there’s a wide range of candidate backgrounds. This guide unpacks exactly what hiring managers look for first in robotics applications and how to optimise your CV, portfolio and cover letter so you stand out in the UK market.

The Skills Gap in Robotics Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Robotics is no longer confined to science fiction or isolated research labs. Today, robots perform critical tasks across manufacturing, healthcare, logistics, agriculture, defence, hospitality and even education. In the UK, businesses are embracing automation to improve productivity, reduce costs and tackle labour shortages. Yet despite strong interest and a growing number of university programmes in robotics, many employers report a persistent problem: graduates are not job-ready for real-world robotics roles. This is not a question of intelligence or dedication. It is a widening skills gap between what universities teach and what employers actually need in robotics jobs. In this article, we’ll explore that gap in depth — what universities do well, where their programmes often fall short, why the disconnect exists, what employers really want, and how you can bridge the divide to build a thriving career in robotics.