A bit about us:

We are mid-size startup (~130 employees) looking for experienced engineers to get involved in the very beginning stages of building a brand-new product. We want engineers who are excited about taking an idea from nothing to something and love the risk/rewards of taking a chance. We are building a product that is quick, robust and always available to our end-users.

We are 100% Serverless, use self-sufficient team structures, continuous delivery and the latest technologies like React, Node.js, JavaScript, TypeScript, AWS, Serverless Architecture (Lambda), Full CI/CD, GraphQL, React Native, Terraform, Docker, DynamoDB etc. We are a smaller shop so you will be expected to be able to work independently but will still have a team on to lean on when necessary. We are currently hiring full-stack, front end and backend engineers.

Why join us?

  • Above market salaries
  • Flexible hours/schedule (remote option)
  • Equity in high-growth start-up (Equity is not in lieu of salary, we pay above market salaries)
  • Health, Dental, Vision, Life, Disability Insurance
  • 401k matching
  • Generous PTO
  • Beautiful office in great location
  • Whatever gear you need to be successful (new computer, headphones, fancy desk, etc.)

Job Details

Is your background a fit?
  • Builder who can implement solutions across diverse tech stacks and with continuous delivery as an assumption
  • Experience building in JavaScript and Node.js
  • Experience building service-oriented APIs (GraphQL and REST API) and cloud services (preferable against AWS)
  • Fully understands the concepts of “infrastructure as code"

Bonus Experience:
  • AWS Lambda, TypeScript, React, React Native, Redux, DynamoDB, PostgreSQL, RDS, Docker, Terraform, Serverless
  • Be familiar with phrases like "moving XXX to the left", "full-cycle developer", or "chaos engineering"
  • Are tired of doing things the way they've always been done and aren't afraid of new technologies
  • Experience working with open source projects. At least opening bugs, hopefully submitting fixes, and ideally publishing your own projects