About the job
About AiDASH
AiDASH is an innovative enterprise AI company specializing in vegetation risk intelligence tailored for electric utilities. Utilizing our unique VegetationAI™ technology, we provide a comprehensive remote grid inspection and monitoring platform, leveraging a SatelliteFirst approach to detect and mitigate threats to the grid, including vegetation. Our proactive strategy aims to reduce wildfire risks and lessen the impact of storms, assisting over 140 utilities in lowering costs, enhancing reliability, and minimizing liability across their operations. At AiDASH, we are dedicated to protecting critical utility infrastructure and ensuring a sustainable future for humanAIty™. Discover more at www.aidash.com.
As a Series C growth company, we are supported by prominent investors such as Shell Ventures, National Grid Partners, G2 Venture Partners, Duke Energy, Edison International, Lightrock, and Marubeni. Our excellence has been acknowledged by Forbes for two consecutive years as one of “America’s Best Startup Employers,” and we are honored to be among the select software companies featured in Time Magazine’s “America’s Top GreenTech Companies 2024.” Furthermore, Deloitte Technology Fast 500™ has ranked us No. 12 among companies in the San Francisco Bay Area and No. 59 overall in their 2024 listing of the top 500 companies.
Join us in Securing Tomorrow!
The Role
As a Lead Full-Stack Engineer, you will be instrumental in architecting, designing, and developing scalable, high-performance platforms across both frontend and backend systems. You will serve as a technical leader and a strong individual contributor, overseeing complex engineering projects from inception to delivery while upholding high standards of code quality, system reliability, and developer productivity. On the frontend, you will spearhead the development of contemporary web applications using React, directing component architecture, state management strategies, performance optimizations, and overall user experience enhancements.

