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A leading technology firm in London is seeking a brilliant engineer to work on agentic AI systems. The role emphasizes hands-on engineering and the creation of intelligent agents, allowing for ownership and impact from day one. Ideal candidates are those with a passion for innovative AI solutions and practical coding experience. An exciting opportunity to shape the future of advanced AI research awaits.
Ready to build the frontier of AI that talks to itself?
We're looking for a brilliant engineer to dive headfirst into one of the most fascinating frontiers in tech: agentic AI, getting large language models to collaborate, reason, and orchestrate complex systems together.
This isn’t research in a lab or tweaking another foundational model. This is raw, hands-on engineering: wiring up LLMs to build tools that think, delegate, and act autonomously. It’s early stage, high impact, and moves fast. If you’ve been experimenting with autonomous agents, chaining LLMs, or hacking together side projects that push the edge of what AI can do, you’ll fit right in.
You might be:
We don’t care about PhDs, pedigrees, or perfect CVs. What matters is technical brilliance, curiosity, and the kind of instinct that comes from actually doing the work. If you've got the talent to lead in this space, even if you're early in your career, this role is built for you.
You’ll be joining a small, tight knit engineering team that's serious about AI, obsessed with product, and eager to hand you real ownership from day one. You'll be working on products where agentic systems aren't just a cool experiment, they're the core.
If your GitHub is full of side projects you couldn’t stop building, if you're chasing the thrill of solving unsolved problems with code, and if agentic AI is where your heart is, we want to talk.
This is a unique opportunity to help shape the future of advanced research infrastructure at one of the world’s leading academic institutions.
You will join forces with some of the brightest minds in technology.
What if your coding skills could do more than just build software, what if they could make entire systems faster, smarter, and unbreakable?