In his essay “You Weren’t Meant to Have a Boss”, Paul Graham argues that humans evolved for hunter-gatherer-sized groups—eight being the ideal number. James C. Scott’s “Seeing Like a State” notes how 1800s bureaucrats attempted to impose process on the land, planting the single fastest growing tree species in a grid—and were met with rampant forest fire and disease.
These authors make an excellent point. You can get a lot done as an eight-person team (Mercury launched with a team of nine), and imposing too much structure can be fatal. At the same time, scale has clearly won out: Graham’s Y Combinator now employs over 80 people, and the best permaculturists can’t compete with modern tree farms.
Your job as an engineering manager at Mercury is to balance this tension, creating structure with clear purpose to help your team reach its full potential.
In this role, you’ll:
You should:
We encourage you to try our demo site if you’re interested in applying for the role.
The total rewards package at Mercury includes base salary, equity (stock options), and benefits. Our salary and equity ranges are highly competitive within the SaaS and fintech industry and are updated regularly using the most reliable compensation survey data for our industry. New hire offers are made based on a candidate’s experience, expertise, geographic location, and internal pay equity relative to peers.
Our target new hire base salary ranges for this role are the following:
We use Covey as part of our hiring and / or promotional process for jobs in NYC and certain features may qualify it as an AEDT. As part of the evaluation process we provide Covey with job requirements and candidate submitted applications. We began using Covey Scout for Inbound on January 22, 2024. Please see the independent bias audit report covering our use of Covey here.
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