About this Senior Software Engineer, Ecommerce role at Brevo
PushOwl helps 50,000+ Shopify merchants drive revenue through smarter marketing, and brands like Levi's, Louis Vuitton, Tissot, Chanel, and L'Occitane trust us to do it.
What You’ll Own:
- Owning ecommerce features or product lines like Email/SMS/RCS end-to-end, from fuzzy idea to live in production.
- Writing backend services in Python and Go, plus the bits of PHP still around.
- Touching the frontend when the feature needs it.
- Talking to users, prototyping fast, and deciding what's good enough for v1.
- Making scope and trade-off calls inside the pod, then sanity-checking them with the wider team.
- Carrying the product thinking for yourself.
- Pushing for quality where it matters (reliability, performance), without gold-plating.
What We're Looking For:
- 5+ years shipping software, with features you can point to that moved a real number.
- Strong in Python and Go. Comfortable around PHP. Willing to work on the frontend when needed.
- SaaS or B2B background; you understand multi-tenant products and customer workflows.
- Have a coding agent as a daily driver, not weekend tinkering. You know where AI helps and where it gets in the way.
- Strong product instincts: opinions you can defend, and the humility to change them when data says otherwise.
- Comfortable in small autonomous teams with little process.
- Clear writer. Matters a lot in a distributed setup.
- Nice to have: ecommerce background, early-stage experience, or familiarity with email / CRM / marketing automation.
This role is for you if:
- You'd rather build the tool than wait for it.
- You've shipped in ambiguous environments and enjoyed it.
- You want to use AI to drive real business outcomes, not just build cool tech.
- You're obsessed with quality and craft, and you're figuring out how AI changes both.
This role is not for you if:
- You need detailed specs and clear boundaries to be productive.
- You haven't built AI tools into how you work.
- You struggle to express your reasoning clearly in writing.
- You'd rather specialise narrowly than be useful across the stack.