
Principal Product Engineer, Europe
Job Description
Posted on: November 15, 2025
Hi đđŸ Iâm Abhik, Ashby's Co-Founder and VP of Engineering. Weâre looking for an ambitious full-stack engineer who is laser-focused on solving customer problems and making the right long-term investments to solve them not only today but in our future features and products.
What Ashby gives you in return is the best of both early and growth-stage environments. The agency and no-nonsense of a seed startup: you write product specs, make product and design decisions, and build in an almost-no-meeting culture. While also the product-market fit and scale of a growth-stage startup: tens of thousands of daily users who depend on your software and eagerly await your next feature.
We have notable customers like Notion, Linear, Shopify, and Snowflake. Our growth and retention metrics are best-in-class among our peers: we have tens of millions in ARR, growing >100% year over year, very low churn, and many years of runway. Weâll share more details once we meet.
Youâve probably seen this role posted before, and itâs because weâre always expanding the team (weâre on track to double this year). Weâre bubbling with ideas on how to support Talent Acquisition through software, and weâve started the journey of building products beyond Talent Acquisition. We read every application and aim to respond to yours within 3-4 days (often sooner).
About The Role And How We Work
Our engineering culture strives to recreate the environments where we did our best work as ICs â where we had the ownership and agency to impact our users with creative and innovative software.
I started my career building software for artists in the Visual Effects industry. It was a formative experience for me as a software engineer because success relied on my ability to be a product manager and designer. I talked to artists to understand their needs. I came up with ideas. I did industry research, designed interfaces, and prototyped ideas. I watched artists use what I built and decided what to tackle in the next iteration. No daily stand-ups, no t-shirt sizing, no planning meetings.
I studied computer science to solve problems, not tickets, and this felt exactly like that. I not only felt creative and fulfilled but the agency and ownership we were given as engineers powered an incredible amount of innovation.
Innovation came differently (or not at all) at technology startups beyond the seed stage, often through an engineerâs force of will and ability to push back against culture (rather than any encouragement from it). Engineering was narrowed to implementation and delivery, partly due to the influence of other departments and partly due to the influx of "Agile" processes like sprint planning. In those companies, I felt like a JIRA jockey.
About
At Ashby, weâre building an environment that is optimistic about what engineers can own and achieve. An environment that embraces innovative engineers, and, frankly, often stays out of their way. As a Product Engineer, youâll take ownership over a large portion of one of our products and own projects end-to-end (wearing hats traditionally worn by product and design). Youâll research competitors, write product specs, make wireframes, and more. To ground it with examples, product engineers at Ashby have:
- Designed and built automated interview scheduling. This feature automates scheduling by calculating possible times from a pool of interviewers and other constraints, and then presenting these times to the candidate for selection via our responsive web app. This solves the âCalendar Tetrisâ problem I talk about in "What We're Building."
- Built a generalized declarative filter architecture that allows users to create complex filters for any record with a consistent UI and compile it to SQL in our backend. Many user-facing features use it.
- Specced, designed, and implemented a feature that allows users to complete signing offers entirely within Ashby. This project involved talking to customers to understand their requirements, deciding what technologies to use, building a prototype, and working with other team members to integrate the final implementation into additional features.
What Weâre Building
As engineers, we are used to tooling that makes us better at what we do. When we started Ashby, we saw the opposite with Talent Acquisition software. Recruiting teams were leveling up how they did their work, but instead of software meeting this new standard, it held them back.
Scheduling a final round is an excellent example. Recruiting teams wanted to schedule candidates faster, track interviewer preparation and quality, and do it with half the headcount. A recruiter needed to manually collect availability from the candidate, identify qualified interviewers, perform âCalendar Tetrisâ to find who is available to interview the candidate, schedule on the earliest date possible, and make any last-minute adjustments as availability changed. They must do this while considering the interview load on each individual and whether interviewers need to be trained and shadowing others. đ„” TA software didnât help.
As hiring managers, we know TA is a critical function, and as engineers, we know software can do better. So, we built and continue to build Ashby to give TA teams the highest standard of tooling. Software thatâs intelligent and powerful. Software that provides insights into where theyâre failing and automates or simplifies many of the tasks theyâre underwater with. We want other functions and departments to be jealous of what TA teams can do with Ashby, and today they often are!
Why You Should or Shouldnât Apply
Software Engineers Come In Many Flavors, Not All Of Which Fit Our Model. Here Are Some Things To Help You Decide If This Fits You And What Youâre Looking For
- Youâre not afraid to tackle any part of a technology stack. You do whatâs necessary to successfully deliver a feature, whether writing frontend or choosing new infrastructure. Weâll provide a supportive environment to do it successfully (e.g., design system, SRE team).
- Youâve tackled projects with a lot of product and technical ambiguity, and you thrive at the intersection of the two. Weâre not building a simple CRUD app, and many of the challenges we tackle require you to use your knowledge of our customers to build powerful abstractions and flexibility in the system to solve a class of problems.
- You know how to strike the right balance between speed and quality. Ashby wasnât built quickly. We took four years to launch publicly because convincing customers to switch required a high-quality product. However, time isnât infinite, especially for a startup, so we still move with urgencyâweâve built the equivalent of three or more VC-backed startups with a very small team.
- You are ambitious and always looking to improve your skills. For most engineers, this role will give you more freedom and responsibilities than youâve experienced in the past. To thrive (and level up), youâll need to be open to feedback (and we give lots of it).
- Youâre an excellent collaborator and communicator. Ownership and freedom donât mean you work in a vacuum. Youâll need to vet your decisions with the appropriate stakeholders, keep them up to date when necessary, and work with other engineers to get your projects across the finish line. Clear and concise communication helps a lot here!
- You seek to create leverage in your work. The nature of software is that you can often automate or abstract what would be tedious, time-consuming work. Your impatience usually leads to new abstractions, tools to allow Support to debug before Engineering, new lint rules to prevent common bugs, etc.
Put Another Way, You Shouldnât Apply If
- You need company-driven process and structure to get your projects across the finish line. Sprint planning and well-defined project management processes are things you need or look to others to lead. Youâd rather focus on the technical details and challenges.
- You only want to do exciting work. Weâre building a team of kind, collaborative folks. Customer issues and investigations are distributed across the team, including our high-level ICs.
- You can get lost in the details. Once you start implementation, it can be hard to take a step back and think about the project as a whole. You like everything to be planned upfront.
- You havenât led or taken ownership of projects before. Youâre used to working with tech leads and taking on tasks distributed by them.
- You want to mentor earlier-career engineers. We rely on engineers owning their projects, so we need engineers with that experience. This requires the team to be reasonably tenured. More than 90% of the team would be considered Senior or above in the industry today, so mentorship opportunities are very limited.
- To you, a tech lead, staff, or principal engineer is someone who spends most of their time project managing or doing architecture reviews. Our most tenured engineers spend most of their time building, and we often trust them with our most challenging problems. While they lead product and technical areas and help other engineers plan their most challenging work, itâs not a requirement, nor do engineers need their sign-off.
Technology Stack
Iâm sharing our tech stack with the caveat that we donât require previous experience in it (but a love of typed languages is helpful đ): TypeScript (frontend & backend), React, GraphQL API, Node.js, Postgres, Redis.
When they joined Ashby, many of our engineers switched from other languages like Swift and Kotlin (Ben), platforms like iOS (Tom) and Windows (Sergey). We care more about fundamentals (e.g., debugging, abstractions) and how fast you learn. For folks on the team who switched, it's nice seeing changes hot reload versus waiting for XCode to compile đ .
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