Every role in humanoid robotics.
19 published role guides across 12 stack areas. Each guide covers the work, the skills, the tools, the projects that prove ability, and the companies hiring today.
Actuator Engineer
Actuator engineers design, integrate, test, and improve the electromechanical systems that make a humanoid robot move.
Controls Engineer
Controls engineers make humanoid robots move with stability, precision, compliance, and safety.
Electrical Systems Engineer
Electrical systems engineers design, integrate, test, and improve the electrical hardware that lets a humanoid robot power up, sense, compute, move, charge, communicate, and survive real-world use.
Embedded Systems Engineer
Embedded systems engineers build the low-level software that lets a humanoid robot's electronics, sensors, actuators, batteries, and compute modules work reliably in the real world.
Field Robotics Engineer
Field robotics engineers make robots work outside the lab.
Manufacturing Engineer
Manufacturing engineers turn humanoid robot prototypes into repeatable build systems.
Mechanical Design Engineer
Mechanical design engineers create the physical parts, assemblies, mechanisms, structures, enclosures, joints, covers, and thermal paths that make a humanoid robot possible.
Robot Test & Validation Engineer
Robot test and validation engineers prove whether a humanoid robot, subsystem, or software release actually works under realistic conditions.
Robotics Technical Program Manager
Robotics technical program managers help complex robot programs move from ambiguous idea to working hardware, tested software, pilot deployment, and eventually scalable production.