Jobs · Engineering

Engineering Lead

Counterpart · Austin, TX · 6 days ago
RemoteRemoteEngineering$190k–$240k/yrFull-time

Technical Vision

You own the Technical Vision for Your Systems:

  • Know where each system in your domain is going, how they depend on each other, and where the boundaries and data contracts need to be explicit.
  • Hold the line on architecture. Catch redundant systems before they get built. Push for reuse and consolidation. Say no when the easier path creates long-term sprawl.
  • Check with the other Engineering Leads before locking a technical approach: is anyone solving something similar, does this create or break an assumption in another domain?
  • Made deliberate calls on technical debt within your domain. Know when to accumulate it, when to pay it down, and when to refactor. Communicate the trade-offs to your Technical Product Manager and the VP of Engineering.
  • Own the context architecture for your domain. Keep documentation, design patterns, and domain knowledge up to date so engineers can operate your systems without relying on tribal knowledge.

Planning the Work

You plan the work:

  • Partner with your Technical Product Manager during planning. Combined, you turn business problems into initiatives and projects. You write the high-level technical requirements for each project: the system approach, the scalability, security, and integration considerations that determine whether the plan is real.
  • Roll projects up to a rough t-shirt size (multi-month or single month) with your Technical Product Manager. For multi-month projects, define what is achievable within one month.
  • Advise the VP of Engineering on Project Lead assignments. You know which engineers can carry which projects.

Review Through Reviews

You review through reviews:

  • Run the technical review for each funded project in your domain. The Project Lead plays back the rounded-out requirements and approach. You confirm the approach fits your systems, follows the standards, and does not create problems the project team cannot see. Then development begins.
  • When a project touches more than one domain, bring the other domain's Engineering Lead into the technical review. One review, all affected leads present.
  • Answer architectural questions when the project team hits them mid-build. Otherwise, stay out of the day-to-day.

Setting and Maintaining Technical Standards

You set and maintain technical standards:

  • Produce and maintain Counterpart's shared technical standards with the other Engineering Leads. Keep them current, specific, and enforceable.
  • Enforce the standards within your domain. When work drifts from the agreed patterns, catch it early and course-correct.
  • Contribute to decisions on AI tooling and development practices. The Engineering Leads collectively decide how AI tools are used across the engineering organization.

Building

You build:

  • Write code and build systems when the work requires your depth. You do not delegate everything. You pick up the hardest problems in your domain.
  • Take the Project Lead hat when a project calls for it. Then you operate as any Project Lead does: round out requirements, run the reviews, break out tickets, delegate, check in with stakeholders, and iterate.
  • Stay at the frontier of AI development. Evaluate emerging frameworks, tools, and practices against Counterpart's systems. Share findings with the other Engineering Leads.
  • Review production incidents in your domain. Identify root causes indicating architectural gaps. Fix the architecture, not just the symptom.

Mentoring

You mentor:

  • Mentor engineers working in your domain. Turn reviews and architectural questions into teaching moments. Raise the bar on how engineers think about system design.
  • Coach Project Leads through hard technical decisions. Help them see the trade-offs, then let them own the execution.

Qualifications

You have:

  • Deep experience designing, building, and operating complex software systems. You have built systems that lasted and maintained systems you inherited.
  • The ability to operate as both architect and individual contributor. You know which the situation calls for and you do not default to one.
  • Demonstrated experience reviewing technical work from other engineers. You turn reviews into decisions, not debates. You can say no with clear reasoning and say yes with conviction.
  • Proficiency with Python, Django, Amazon Web Services (AWS), React, and PostgreSQL.
  • Proficiency developing with AI tools (Claude Code, Cursor, or similar) and the drive to stay ahead of how AI development practices are evolving.
  • Experience setting technical direction across teams without being the manager. You influence through architecture, reviews, and the quality of your own work.
  • Domain curiosity about insurance. You learn the business context your systems support, not just the systems themselves.
  • The ability to communicate clearly across engineering, product, and business. You translate technical complexity without losing meaning.
  • Low ego and high Emotional Quotient (EQ). You influence without authority, take feedback well, and leave your ego out of technical decisions.
  • Experience working with distributed, remote teams.

Pay

Our estimated pay range for this role is $190,000 to $240,000. Base salary is determined by a variety of factors, including but not limited to, market data, location, internal equitability, and experience.

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