Data Consultant/Scientist

Kingdom People
London
1 year ago
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Senior Consultant - Data Scientist

Data Scientist - GenAI - Consultant

Data Scientist - GenAI - Consultant

Data Engineering & Data Science Consultant

Data Engineering & Data Science Consultant

2026 Apprentice - Digital (Data Science) - Belfast

Data Scientist/Consultant need by my global client. Due to a major workload increase my client is looking for a skilled Data Scientist/consultant that has solid Data skills around Azure and Databricks with solid exposure to artificial intelligence(AI). The client has been through many acquisitions over the last 48 months and as things quieten down on the integration front they are looking to start building artificial intelligence into some of the company systems. You must have at least 5 years commercial experience as a Data Scientist/Consultant with at least 4 years commercial experience with Azure and Databricks and at least 2yrs hands on experience in a commercial environment with Artificial Intelligence(AI) and Machine Learning(ML). The role is long term, 12mths, and is outside IR35, ideally you will live somewhere between London and Cambridge as there will be the need to go into either office every so often

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 AI Tools Do You Need to Know to Get an AI Job?

If you are job hunting in AI right now it can feel like you are drowning in tools. Every week there is a new framework, a new “must-learn” platform or a new productivity app that everyone on LinkedIn seems to be using. The result is predictable: job seekers panic-learn a long list of tools without actually getting better at delivering outcomes. Here is the truth most hiring managers will quietly agree with. They do not hire you because you know 27 tools. They hire you because you can solve a problem, communicate trade-offs, ship something reliable and improve it with feedback. Tools matter, but only in service of outcomes. So how many AI tools do you actually need to know? For most AI job seekers: fewer than you think. You need a tight core toolkit plus a role-specific layer. Everything else is optional. This guide breaks it down clearly, gives you a simple framework to choose what to learn and shows you how to present your toolset on your CV, portfolio and interviews.

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

Hiring managers do not start by reading your CV line-by-line. They scan for signals. In AI roles especially, they are looking for proof that you can ship, learn fast, communicate clearly & work safely with data and systems. The best applications make those signals obvious in the first 10–20 seconds. This guide breaks down what hiring managers typically look for first in AI applications in the UK market, how to present it on your CV, LinkedIn & portfolio, and the most common reasons strong candidates get overlooked. Use it as a checklist to tighten your application before you click apply.

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

Artificial intelligence is no longer a future concept. It is already reshaping how businesses operate, how decisions are made, and how entire industries compete. From finance and healthcare to retail, manufacturing, defence, and climate science, AI is embedded in critical systems across the UK economy. Yet despite unprecedented demand for AI talent, employers continue to report severe recruitment challenges. Vacancies remain open for months. Salaries rise year on year. Candidates with impressive academic credentials often fail technical interviews. At the heart of this disconnect lies a growing and uncomfortable truth: Universities are not fully preparing graduates for real-world AI jobs. This article explores the AI skills gap in depth—what is missing from many university programmes, why the gap persists, what employers actually want, and how jobseekers can bridge the divide to build a successful career in artificial intelligence.