engineering
Posted Apr 27Engineering, All
at Telli
Berlin, GermanyOn-site
Requirements
- Most people today still cannot simply say what their problem is in natural language when communicating with businesses. AI changes that.
- Every B2C company - from energy providers to telcos to insurers - will use AI agents to talk to their customers.
- Today, leading B2C companies like Sky are already using telli to deploy thousands of voice agents to provide their customers with a new experience.
- But building a first voice agent is easy, getting it to drive real outcomes for customers and businesses is the hard part. telli helps companies build, deploy, and improve consumer-facing AI voice agents at scale.
- We are a small, AI-pilled team that likes to solve hard problems.
- Be it engineering, product, or GTM - we build, experiment, and move fast, while heavily leveraging the capabilities of AI models.
- As a member of the engineering team you might: - Manage product features end-to-end, we don’t have PMs you really need to own the entire product lifecycle - Make trade-offs what to not ship, shipping is becoming easy but building the right thing is still hard - Polish and iterate on features such that they are delightful to use for customers - Build reliable and scalable systems and own critical parts of the core infrastructure - Solve novel problems that come from working with Voice AI and scaling to
- You make sure you understand the underlying problem - AI-pilled - You are heavily leveraging AI in your work - Strive in ambiguity - You are able to jump into novel ambiguous problem, understand the reason and solve it - Team thinking - You optimize for the eng org output, not personal what may not make you a good fit - you prefer a remote-first environment - you want to be told exactly what to do - you mostly care about the tech, not business outcomes - you want to work 9-5 perks - very competitive pay +
Contact
- Check out our principles https://principles.telli.com/ to see how we work.
Additional details
- ABOUT US Every 10 minutes, 18 million conversations happen between businesses and consumers around the world.
- For decades, the consumer side of those conversations sucked: long queues, robotic menus, repeated explanations, and advice that is often unhelpful.