Comment by extr
Comment by extr 2 days ago
Seems about right. My official title at work is "AI Engineer". What does that mean exactly?
- I'm not a researcher and not fine tuning or deploying models on GPUs
- I have a math/traditional ML background, but my explanation of how transformers, tokenizers, etc work would be hand-wavy at best.
- I'm a "regular engineer" in the sense I'm following many of the standard SWE/SDLC practices in my org.
- I'm exclusively focused on building AI features for our product, I wear a PM hat too.
- I'm pretty tuned in to the latest model releases and capabilities of frontier models, and consider being able to articulate that information part of my job.
- I also use AI heavily to produce code, which is helpfully a pretty good way to get a sense for model capabilities.
Do I deserve a special job title...maybe? I think there's definitely an argument that "AI Engineering" really isn't a special thing, and considering how much of my day to day is pure integration work with the actual product, I can see that. OTOH, part of my job and my value at work is very product based. I pay a lot of attention to what other people in the industry are doing, new model releases, and how others are building things, since it's such a new area and there's no "standard playbook" yet for many things.
I actually quite enjoy it since there's a ton of opportunity to be creative. When AI first started becoming big I thought about doing the other direction - leveraging my math/ML background to get deeper into GPUs and MLOps/research-lite kind of work. Instead I went in a more producty direction, which I don't regret yet.
The author’s definitions suggest you should have “Applied” in your title, which I like, but my impression is that “applied” roles so vastly outnumber “creation of models” roles globally that it’s actually the latter that would benefit from a modifier. For now, you have to rely on context (mostly the nature of the company’s primary output) when trying to interpret something like a job posting or an acquaintance’s title.