Graphcore is hiring again after its SoftBank acquisition — but what do the roles tell us about its future focus?

Chipmaker is hiring aggressively for roles spanning multiple divisions.

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Recruitment drive would increase Graphcore's headcount by 20% Announcement marks first big moves since SoftBank acquisition Roles available in silicon design, software, and infrastructure Graphcore has announced plans for a fresh hiring drive just months after its landmark acquisition by SoftBank . The British AI chip manufacturer announced it has 75 open positions spanning a range of business functions, including silicon design, data center infrastructure management, hardware engineering, and AI research. “Whether your expertise is in silicon, systems, software, AI research or any of the other functions that we are expanding, this is a chance to work at the leading-edge of your field,” said CEO Nigel Toon.

Graphcore hiring spree The recruitment campaign represents a 20% increase in Graphcore’s overall workforce, and will include positions at all of its global offices. The company currently has sites in Bristol, Cambridge, and London in the UK, along with offices in Gdansk, Poland, and Hsinchu City, Taiwan. Graphcore was acquired by SoftBank in July 2024 in a deal described by Toon as a “tremendous endorsement” for the company.



As part of the deal, the company became a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Japanese investment bank. While financial terms of the acquisition were undisclosed, it’s believed the deal was valued at around $600 million, representing a significant markdown on its 2020 valuation of around $2.5 billion.

Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed! Toon described the deal as a “tremendous endorsement” for the company and said the acquisition is a “great outcome”. What does the move say about Graphcore future plans? In its announcement, Graphcore said the move builds on a pledge to “continue to invest in the creation of high-skilled jobs spanning a range of disciplines” in the wake of its acquisition. The open positions do point toward its potential future plans, however, particularly with regard to chip design.

Of the 75 roles Graphcore is recruiting for, 10 of these alone are in Silicon engineering design, suggesting the company plans to ramp up development of its next generation chip range. Graphcore currently boasts three generations of silicon, with its most recent - the Bow Intelligence Processing Unit (IPU) - released in 2022. The Bow IPU delivers up to 350 teraflops of AI compute, and boasts a 40% increase in performance and 16% power efficiency compared to the company’s previous generation IPU.

However, unlike other processors available on the market, Graphcore’s IPUs do not use High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) technology. Instead, they rely on internal SRAM. Competitor chips do use HBM though, including Intel , AMD and Nvidia .

With a raft of positions available in its silicon design department, this begs the question of whether Graphcore could shake up its design to include HBM capabilities. Similarly, advertised roles in its infrastructure solutions and software departments may also point toward a change of tack for Graphcore, perhaps with its focus on data center capabilities sharpening. It wouldn’t be alone here, either.

Nvidia offers its own software and infrastructure options for AI inferencing. This has been crucial in its rapid ascendance throughout the generative AI boom. AMD has also focused heavily on its own data center segment in recent years to keep pace with Nvidia.

I watched Nvidia's Computex 2024 keynote and it made my blood run cold Japanese owner of Arm gets a bargain with Graphcore purchase Nvidia promises up to 700% return on investment on GPU doing AI inference work.