Software Development Engineer, Sponsored Products and Brands
Amazon · Toronto, Canada · Software Development
About this role
Amazon is hiring a mid-level Software Engineer based in Toronto, Canada. The posting calls out experience with LLMs, Distributed Systems, Machine Learning. Compensation is listed at C$114,800–C$191,800 per year.
- Role
- Software Engineer
- Function
- software engineering
- Level
- mid
- Track
- Individual contributor
- Employment
- Full-time
- Location
- Toronto, Canada
- Department
- Software Development
- Posted
- May 8, 2026
More roles at Amazon
Job description
from Amazon careersThe Sponsored Products and Brands team at Amazon Ads is re-imagining the advertising landscape through cutting-edge generative AI technologies, revolutionizing how millions of customers discover products and engage with brands across Amazon.com and beyond. We are at the forefront of re-inventing advertising experiences, bridging human creativity with artificial intelligence to transform every aspect of the advertising lifecycle from ad creation and optimization to performance analysis and customer insights. We are a passionate group of innovators dedicated to developing responsible and intelligent AI technologies that balance the needs of advertisers, enhance the shopping experience, and strengthen the marketplace. If you're energized by solving complex challenges and pushing the boundaries of what's possible with AI, join us in shaping the future of advertising. Key job responsibilities • Design and develop the SPB Agent platform using Gen AI/ML technologies that provide consistent, well-reasoned outcomes for advertiser guidance in a secure reusable architecture, delivering low latency and secure advertiser experiences • Optimizing for operation costs at scale through efficient resource utilization, token consumption and memory footprint at scale. • Collaborate with cross-functional teams to integrate AI-driven solutions across our advertising ecosystem • Pioneer new approaches to conversational AI and natural language interactions in advertising…