6sense
Software Engineer III, Frontend
San Francisco, California, United StatesmidAdded today
About this role
6sense, a leading Revenue AI platform, is hiring a Software Engineer III - Frontend to build modern, scalable web applications with React and TypeScript. You'll develop intuitive user experiences, create reusable components, and collaborate with product and design teams to deliver high-impact features for B2B revenue teams.
What you'll do
- Design, develop, and maintain modern frontend applications using React and TypeScript
- Build reusable UI components and contribute to frontend architecture and design systems
- Collaborate with Product, Design, and Backend teams to deliver high-quality features
- Optimize application performance, scalability, accessibility, and responsiveness
- Conduct code reviews and mentor junior engineers
- Troubleshoot production issues and drive continuous improvements
What they're looking for
- React.js and TypeScript
- JavaScript (ES6+), HTML5, CSS3
- State management (Redux, Context API, Zustand)
- Testing frameworks (Jest, React Testing Library, Cypress)
- REST APIs and frontend-backend integration
- Build tools (Webpack, Vite, Babel)
- AI-assisted development tools and coding copilots
- Responsive and accessible web design
Benefits
- Base salary: $179,400 - $263,120
- Bonus program and stock options
- Generous health insurance coverage
- 401(k) employer matching program
- Paid holidays and self-care days
- Life and disability insurance
Opens the official application on the employer’s site. No login required.
6sense
6sense builds Revenue AI products and an AI-driven Account Engagement Platform designed to help with revenue operations. The company is hiring Senior Software Engineers to develop scalable full-stack and backend systems, working with technologies like Java and React in a SaaS environment.
View all jobs at 6senseLikely interview questions
- Tell us about a complex React application you built—how did you manage state and optimize performance?
- Describe your experience with TypeScript. How has it improved your code quality compared to plain JavaScript?