Build software that powers unmanned systems already deployed in the real world.
At sees.ai , we’ve developed a system that is already being used to inspect critical national infrastructure - operating in live environments, not simulations.
Now, following a major contract with National Grid and recent investment, we’re scaling that system into a robust, production-ready platform.
We’re looking for a Senior C++ Software Engineer to help take a working system and evolve it into something reliable, scalable, and ready for wider deployment.
The Role
This is a systems-focused engineering role, not a narrow backend position.
You’ll work across the core software stack that powers our unmanned systems - contributing to everything from flight control and mission systems, through to simulation, connectivity, and operator interfaces.
You’ll be working on software that directly impacts how the system behaves in the field, with a short feedback loop between development and real world use.
This is an environment where:
You’ll balance hands on development and debugging with longer term architectural thinking as the platform evolves.
What You’ll Be Doing
What You’ll Bring
Nice to Have
How You’ll Work
sees.ai has a friendly, down to earth culture where people enjoy working together and take pride in what they build.
Teams collaborate closely across engineering, operations and commercial roles, sharing ideas openly and supporting each other to solve complex problems.
There is real excitement in working on cutting edge autonomous technology, but it is balanced by a thoughtful, responsible approach.
We’re building the operating system for large scale unmanned inspection operations - enabling systems to be controlled remotely and deployed reliably in real world environments.
Our technology is transforming how critical infrastructure is inspected, making it safer, more efficient, and scalable.
You’ll join at a pivotal stage, where a working system is being scaled into a robust platform, and where your work will directly shape how that happens.