Software Engineer

San Francisco, CA, United States

Unit21


Role Location

  • San Francisco, CA, United States

Employees

101 - 250 people

Address

112 S Park St
San Francisco, CA, 94107-1809, US

Tech Stack

  • TypeScript
  • Python
  • AWS
  • Terraform
  • PostgreSQL
  • Kafka
  • Elasticsearch
  • Snowflake
  • DynamoDB

Role Description

A software engineer at Unit21 is entrepreneurial, thoughtful, and a relentless executor. You will take complete, end-to-end ownership of projects across the entire stack. You should already have experience building products across the stack and have a keen understanding of web and/or data engineering frameworks.

We're building products that abstract complex concepts and minimize cognitive overhead for our users. This requires careful thought, high creativity, and a deep understanding of data processing at scale. Our stack is React, GraphQL, Python, Kubernetes, Terraform, PostgreSQL, and whatever allows us to solve the problem in the best way possible. That said, we don't require prior experience with any of them. We're looking for people with high integrity, low ego, and an insatiable drive to learn.

You will be working closely with two technical founders that have built a product leading fintechs and financial institutions are already paying for. They have both been early engineers at companies that have grown exponentially, and have garnered support from a coalition of top-tier institutional and angel investors.

About Unit21

Unit21 provides detection and investigations software for companies to combat money laundering.

Company Culture

When engineers pick companies to work at, the most important but also most frequently overlooked aspect is mission alignment. Unit21's mission is to suppress organized crime by combating money laundering on financial platforms. This materializes today as anti-money laundering operations software used by teams of risk analysts across a variety of companies.

Interested in this role?
Skip straight to final-round interviews by applying through Triplebyte.