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Great Question (YC W21) | AI Engineer | Remote (USA / Aus / NZ) https://jobs.ashbyhq.com/greatquestion/4b2f2c9e-3d77-4195-81...

We are hiring our first AI engineer to help us realize our AI agentic vision. This is a unique opportunity to get in early in the formation of an AI team with a proven product and established customer basis to build on top of.

About us - Great Question is the all-in-one customer research platform loved by teams like Intuit, Canva and Figma. We are on a mission to embed customer insights at the heart of every business decision and ensure companies build something people want!

The current app is Rails/React however this team will have free reign to use the latest AI & LLM tooling, likely building out in Python. Strong engineering fundamentals a must as well as experience deploying AI solutions into production.

Feel free to reach out to me directly (CTO & Cofounder) - pj@greatquestion.co

https://greatquestion.co/


Great Question | Full-stack and Backend Engineers | Full-time | Remote (+- 5 hr PST) | $100-150k https://careers.greatquestion.co/fullstack-engineer/en

Great Question is the all-in-one platform for customer research. We help companies to talk to more customers so that spend more time building software that the world wants!

We're small (10), fully remote, well funded, and have super strong early growth with well known enterprise customers.

We follow strong agile practices, pair often, champion high quality code and work on maintaining great test coverage.

Looking for experienced Rails and React engineers to join our team and help grow the product, processes and culture.

If you're interested please contact pj@greatquestion.co or apply here:

https://careers.greatquestion.co/fullstack-engineer/en


Great Question | Full-stack and Backend Engineers | Full-time | Remote (+- 5 hr PST) | $100-150k

https://careers.greatquestion.co/fullstack-engineer/en

Great Question is the all-in-one platform for customer research. We help companies to talk to more customers so that spend more time building software that the world wants!

We're small (10), fully remote, well funded, and have super strong early growth with well known enterprise customers.

We follow strong agile practices, pair often, champion high quality code and work on maintaining great test coverage.

Looking for experienced Rails and React engineers to join our team and help grow the product, processes and culture.

If you're interested please contact pj@greatquestion.co or apply here:

https://careers.greatquestion.co/fullstack-engineer/en


Great Question (YC W21) | Founding Engineer, Rails | REMOTE | UTC-11 to UTC-5 | USD 110k-130k + equity | https://greatquestion.co/

Great Question helps companies democratize customer research - making it easy for anyone in your product team to run customers interviews, send out surveys, and make research part of every sprint.

We're looking for an experienced Rails engineer to come join our small (but highly performant) team (currently 4 of us, 2 engineering). We're funded with product in market and customers that love us. We're after someone who can come in and own key parts of the backend, champion best practices, write performant, robust code, and help us build a world class platform.

Interested? Apply directly via email at pj@greatquestion.co or here: https://careers.greatquestion.co/founding-engineer/en

Must have strong overlap with PST work hours.


Google's version of freemium?

I'd love to know the numbers behind this. Anyone have an idea of what Google's Adword visitor LTV is for these sites?


I flew from Australia in 2011 for it and have no regrets. At the time though I was very new to the startup scene.

Like any conference most of the value is derived from the networking rather than the speakers/presentations. Keeping in mind the target market, expect to see a lot of undergrads and startup newbies.

That being said the talks are still amazing and there are some more senior guys that go.


I'd be interested to see what value this adds compared to the documentation and existing (free) blog posts on it's use. IMHO Backbone's docs are super friendly and if you're really wondering what's going on under the covers the source code is relatively easy to jump into and understand (assuming you're a javascript programmer not a jQuery hacker)


I agree about the Backbone.js docs being quite awesome. I think they get a bad wrap myself. But I've also found that some folks like the option of watching screencasts to learn about certain topics as well.

I kind of fall into both categories. I really like reading the docs (and more importantly, the code itself) as well as watching someone demonstrate certain topics. I guess I'm weird like that. :)


Completely agree - when it comes to software you will avoid doing 'stupid stuff' if you actually UNDERSTAND what you are doing.


not really a shocking number considering the current state of the industry.


This sounds cool. I would also be quite interested.


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