Neros Tech hiring in Torrance

- Neros Technologies is hiring a Director of Product in Torrance as it expands drone manufacturing in Los Angeles, adding another senior role to a fast-growing team. - The job calls for 8-plus years in product or systems roles, defense or robotics experience, and eligibility for Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information clearance. - The opening lands after Neros unveiled a 250,000-square-foot Torrance-area factory built around producing drones at million-unit scale. (neros.tech)

Neros Technologies is hiring a Director of Product in Torrance, a new senior opening tied to its larger push to scale drone manufacturing in Los Angeles. (job-boards.greenhouse.io) (ziprecruiter.com) The listing says the role will own product direction across Neros’ current and future programs, translate chief executive Soren Monroe-Anderson’s vision into requirements, and represent the company at field demos and government engagements. (himalayas.app) (jobright.ai) Neros says candidates should have at least eight years in product management, systems engineering, or technical strategy with hardware exposure, and it prefers backgrounds in defense, aerospace, robotics, or adjacent industries. The posting also says applicants must be eligible for Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information clearance. (ziprecruiter.com) (learn4good.com) The hire sits inside a much broader build-out. Neros’ public careers page showed 51 open jobs this week, with many based in Torrance across autonomy, electrical engineering, manufacturing, legal, finance, and test operations. (job-boards.greenhouse.io) That Torrance footprint follows Project Millennium, which Neros announced on February 19, 2026. The company said its 250,000-square-foot Los Angeles facility will become its new global headquarters and the base for scaling production from thousands of drones into the millions. (neros.tech) Neros frames that expansion around first-person-view drones, the small pilot-guided aircraft that have become central to the war in Ukraine because they are cheap, expendable, and fast to iterate. The company says its Archer system is BlueUAS certified and built with a secure supply chain and in-house radios designed for jammed environments. (neros.tech) (defensenews.com) The company has been moving quickly for a startup founded in 2023. Arena reported on April 18 that Neros had about 150 employees, closed a $75 million Series B in 2025 led by Sequoia, and recently moved into the new 250,000-square-foot facility. (arenamag.com) Its recent contracts help explain the urgency. Defense News reported in July 2025 that Neros was building about 1,500 Archer drones per month, had won a contract to deliver 6,000 drones to Ukraine over six months, and wanted to reach 10,000 per month by the end of 2025. (defensenews.com) (forbes.com) Neros also says it was selected in 2025 as one of the U.S. Army’s primary first-person-view suppliers in the Purpose-Built Attritable Systems program, a sign that low-cost attack drones are moving deeper into formal Pentagon procurement. (arenamag.com) (vcorps.army.mil) So the Torrance product opening is not just another defense-tech job post. It is a hiring marker for a company trying to turn Southern California aerospace talent into a mass-production drone business with military customers in the United States and Ukraine. (neros.tech) (job-boards.greenhouse.io)

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