Customer Engineer
The Role
Your day-to-day consists of working with new prospective customers who are looking to use open-source Dapr in their solutions, whether these are existing brownfield or new greenfield applications, and then onboarding them to Diagrid Cloud. You will engage with users by creating and delivering customer demos, building Proof of Concept (PoC) solutions in a variety of programming languages and be providing architecture guidance on a broad set of technologies focused in the Cloud Native space. You will use your expert knowledge of cloud engineering and system design to help customers with their most important distributed system challenges.
Qualifications
- 3+ years in a Solutions Engineer, Sales Engineer, Developer Advocate, or similar technical customer-facing role
- Excellent customer engagement and communication skills
- Experience in designing and building enterprise applications and solutions
- Solid understanding of computer science principles with a focus on distributed systems
- Solid developer experience in at least one of Java, .NET or Go
- Good experience with Node and Python
- Experience with open source software
- Experience with Git based version control systems
- Able to shift priorities quickly and adapt to changing circumstances
Bonus
- Experience with Kubernetes, Docker or other container based systems
- Experience with public cloud provider
- Experience with developer frameworks including .ASP.NET Core, Express, Django, Spring Boot
- Experience with Dapr (http://dapr.io)
Benefits
Competitive compensation
Company equity
Remote first & flexible work environment
Flexible paid time off
Comprehensive healthcare for you and your dependents
Choice of hardware
$1000 for home office setup
Monthly WFH stipend
Team events & gatherings
About the role
We believe that open-source software, open standards and APIs are the greatest transformational tools for organizations in the modern software development era. Our mission at Diagrid is to provide developers with APIs and tools that help them focus on their code and not on infrastructure.