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Firecrawl
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  • Remote Product Researcher  

    - Forsyth County
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl... Read More
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl should build next — and why. Right now, our engineers are shipping great infrastructure, and our support and sales teams are handling inbound well. But the bigger product bets — the ones that turn a good tool into a dominant platform — are stalling because nobody has the bandwidth to do real customer discovery. We have a state-of-the-art commercial research paper search endpoint with one customer using it. We have answers, reranking, monitoring — strong features that aren't getting the focused attention they deserve. You fix that. This isn't a PM role where you write tickets and manage a backlog. You're in the field. You talk to customers — a lot of them. You find the patterns, source the insights, and bring them back to the team in a way that changes what we prioritize. You're the bridge between what developers are actually trying to do and what we're building. Salary Range: $160,000–$230,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.15% Location: San Francisco, CA (Hybrid) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 3+ years in product research, customer discovery, technical PM, or founder-level product work — with demonstrated results Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get LLM-ready data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure superintelligence will use to gather data on the web. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Talk to customers constantly. This is the job. You're running 15-25 customer conversations a week — discovery calls, user interviews, onboarding sessions, churn conversations. You're not surveying people. You're having real conversations that uncover what they're building, where they're stuck, and what would make Firecrawl indispensable to their workflow. You develop a sixth sense for what customers say versus what they actually need. Find the insights that change priorities. You don't just report what customers said — you synthesize it. You spot the patterns across dozens of conversations and turn them into clear, actionable product recommendations. "Here's the use case we're missing, here's how big it is, here's what we'd need to build, here's why it matters now." You bring receipts. Own customer discovery for new product surfaces. When the team is exploring a new direction — a new endpoint, a new pricing model, a new market segment — you're the person who goes deep. You map the landscape, talk to the right people, and come back with a clear picture of whether it's worth pursuing and how to win. You've done this at the 0-to-1 stage and you've done it at scale. You know the difference. Be the voice of the customer in every product conversation. You're in the room when product and engineering decisions are being made. Not to slow things down — to make them sharper. You bring real user context that prevents the team from building technically impressive things nobody asked for. Close the feedback loop. When the team ships something based on your research, you go back to the customers who informed it. You validate. You measure. You learn. Discovery isn't a one-time phase — it's a continuous cycle that compounds the more you do it. Create content from customer conversations. The best product research doubles as marketing. Customer stories, use case write-ups, product positioning insights — you naturally produce content that helps the team sell and market, not just build. What We're Looking For Ex-founder energy. You've built something from scratch — ideally in dev tools or technical infrastructure. You know what it feels like to talk to your first 100 customers and figure out product-market fit by hand. That instinct doesn't come from reading about it. YC background is a major plus. Genuinely technical. You don't need to be writing production code, but you need to understand the product deeply enough to have credible conversations with developers. "Engineer" should be somewhere in your background, or you should be the kind of person who can vibe-code a working prototype and talk fluently about APIs, SDKs, and developer workflows. You can't do discovery on a technical product if you don't understand how it works. Exceptional communicator. You're great on camera, great on calls, great in writing. You can talk to a senior ML engineer about their RAG pipeline and then turn that conversation into a crisp internal brief that changes what the team builds. You're organized, you follow up, and people enjoy talking to you. Executor, not theorist. You don't produce 30-page research reports that nobody reads. You produce clear recommendations with enough evidence to act on, and you move fast enough that your insights are still relevant when you share them. You bias toward action. Comfortable with ambiguity. There's no playbook for this role at Firecrawl yet. You're building the customer discovery function from scratch. If you need a manager to tell you who to talk to and what questions to ask, this isn't the role. If you thrive when you get to figure it out — keep reading. Backgrounds that tend to do well: Ex-founders in the dev tools or API infrastructure space who understand 0-to-1 customer discovery. Technical PMs who've done real discovery work (not just roadmap management). Developer advocates who went deep on product strategy, not just content. People from the YC network who understand how early-stage companies find product-market fit. Engineers who realized they were better at talking to customers than writing code — and leaned into it. What We're NOT Looking For Traditional product managers. If your experience is writing PRDs, grooming backlogs, and running sprint planning — that's not this. We need someone who's in the field, not in Jira. Consultants or freelancers. We need someone embedded in the team who builds deep context over time. If your background is mostly advisory work or short engagements, the learning curve will be too steep and the insights too shallow. People who aren't technical enough. If you can't hold your own in a conversation about web scraping, API design, LLMs, or developer infrastructure — you won't be credible with our customers and you won't be useful to our engineering team. You don't need to be an engineer. But you need to be deeply comfortable in technical territory. Conference-circuit types. If your version of "customer discovery" is networking at events and collecting business cards, that's not what we mean. We mean sitting down with a developer, understanding their architecture, and figuring out where Firecrawl fits — or doesn't. Slow movers. We're a 26-person company competing in a market that's moving at light speed. If you need weeks to synthesize findings or months to build conviction on a recommendation, the window will have closed. A Note On Pace We operate at an absurd level of urgency because the window for what we're building won't stay open forever. If that excites you, keep reading. If it doesn't, no hard feelings — but this role probably isn't for you. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Product Researcher  

    - East Baton Rouge Parish
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl... Read More
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl should build next — and why. Right now, our engineers are shipping great infrastructure, and our support and sales teams are handling inbound well. But the bigger product bets — the ones that turn a good tool into a dominant platform — are stalling because nobody has the bandwidth to do real customer discovery. We have a state-of-the-art commercial research paper search endpoint with one customer using it. We have answers, reranking, monitoring — strong features that aren't getting the focused attention they deserve. You fix that. This isn't a PM role where you write tickets and manage a backlog. You're in the field. You talk to customers — a lot of them. You find the patterns, source the insights, and bring them back to the team in a way that changes what we prioritize. You're the bridge between what developers are actually trying to do and what we're building. Salary Range: $160,000–$230,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.15% Location: San Francisco, CA (Hybrid) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 3+ years in product research, customer discovery, technical PM, or founder-level product work — with demonstrated results Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get LLM-ready data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure superintelligence will use to gather data on the web. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Talk to customers constantly. This is the job. You're running 15-25 customer conversations a week — discovery calls, user interviews, onboarding sessions, churn conversations. You're not surveying people. You're having real conversations that uncover what they're building, where they're stuck, and what would make Firecrawl indispensable to their workflow. You develop a sixth sense for what customers say versus what they actually need. Find the insights that change priorities. You don't just report what customers said — you synthesize it. You spot the patterns across dozens of conversations and turn them into clear, actionable product recommendations. "Here's the use case we're missing, here's how big it is, here's what we'd need to build, here's why it matters now." You bring receipts. Own customer discovery for new product surfaces. When the team is exploring a new direction — a new endpoint, a new pricing model, a new market segment — you're the person who goes deep. You map the landscape, talk to the right people, and come back with a clear picture of whether it's worth pursuing and how to win. You've done this at the 0-to-1 stage and you've done it at scale. You know the difference. Be the voice of the customer in every product conversation. You're in the room when product and engineering decisions are being made. Not to slow things down — to make them sharper. You bring real user context that prevents the team from building technically impressive things nobody asked for. Close the feedback loop. When the team ships something based on your research, you go back to the customers who informed it. You validate. You measure. You learn. Discovery isn't a one-time phase — it's a continuous cycle that compounds the more you do it. Create content from customer conversations. The best product research doubles as marketing. Customer stories, use case write-ups, product positioning insights — you naturally produce content that helps the team sell and market, not just build. What We're Looking For Ex-founder energy. You've built something from scratch — ideally in dev tools or technical infrastructure. You know what it feels like to talk to your first 100 customers and figure out product-market fit by hand. That instinct doesn't come from reading about it. YC background is a major plus. Genuinely technical. You don't need to be writing production code, but you need to understand the product deeply enough to have credible conversations with developers. "Engineer" should be somewhere in your background, or you should be the kind of person who can vibe-code a working prototype and talk fluently about APIs, SDKs, and developer workflows. You can't do discovery on a technical product if you don't understand how it works. Exceptional communicator. You're great on camera, great on calls, great in writing. You can talk to a senior ML engineer about their RAG pipeline and then turn that conversation into a crisp internal brief that changes what the team builds. You're organized, you follow up, and people enjoy talking to you. Executor, not theorist. You don't produce 30-page research reports that nobody reads. You produce clear recommendations with enough evidence to act on, and you move fast enough that your insights are still relevant when you share them. You bias toward action. Comfortable with ambiguity. There's no playbook for this role at Firecrawl yet. You're building the customer discovery function from scratch. If you need a manager to tell you who to talk to and what questions to ask, this isn't the role. If you thrive when you get to figure it out — keep reading. Backgrounds that tend to do well: Ex-founders in the dev tools or API infrastructure space who understand 0-to-1 customer discovery. Technical PMs who've done real discovery work (not just roadmap management). Developer advocates who went deep on product strategy, not just content. People from the YC network who understand how early-stage companies find product-market fit. Engineers who realized they were better at talking to customers than writing code — and leaned into it. What We're NOT Looking For Traditional product managers. If your experience is writing PRDs, grooming backlogs, and running sprint planning — that's not this. We need someone who's in the field, not in Jira. Consultants or freelancers. We need someone embedded in the team who builds deep context over time. If your background is mostly advisory work or short engagements, the learning curve will be too steep and the insights too shallow. People who aren't technical enough. If you can't hold your own in a conversation about web scraping, API design, LLMs, or developer infrastructure — you won't be credible with our customers and you won't be useful to our engineering team. You don't need to be an engineer. But you need to be deeply comfortable in technical territory. Conference-circuit types. If your version of "customer discovery" is networking at events and collecting business cards, that's not what we mean. We mean sitting down with a developer, understanding their architecture, and figuring out where Firecrawl fits — or doesn't. Slow movers. We're a 26-person company competing in a market that's moving at light speed. If you need weeks to synthesize findings or months to build conviction on a recommendation, the window will have closed. A Note On Pace We operate at an absurd level of urgency because the window for what we're building won't stay open forever. If that excites you, keep reading. If it doesn't, no hard feelings — but this role probably isn't for you. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Product Researcher  

    - Dallas County
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl... Read More
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl should build next — and why. Right now, our engineers are shipping great infrastructure, and our support and sales teams are handling inbound well. But the bigger product bets — the ones that turn a good tool into a dominant platform — are stalling because nobody has the bandwidth to do real customer discovery. We have a state-of-the-art commercial research paper search endpoint with one customer using it. We have answers, reranking, monitoring — strong features that aren't getting the focused attention they deserve. You fix that. This isn't a PM role where you write tickets and manage a backlog. You're in the field. You talk to customers — a lot of them. You find the patterns, source the insights, and bring them back to the team in a way that changes what we prioritize. You're the bridge between what developers are actually trying to do and what we're building. Salary Range: $160,000–$230,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.15% Location: San Francisco, CA (Hybrid) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 3+ years in product research, customer discovery, technical PM, or founder-level product work — with demonstrated results Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get LLM-ready data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure superintelligence will use to gather data on the web. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Talk to customers constantly. This is the job. You're running 15-25 customer conversations a week — discovery calls, user interviews, onboarding sessions, churn conversations. You're not surveying people. You're having real conversations that uncover what they're building, where they're stuck, and what would make Firecrawl indispensable to their workflow. You develop a sixth sense for what customers say versus what they actually need. Find the insights that change priorities. You don't just report what customers said — you synthesize it. You spot the patterns across dozens of conversations and turn them into clear, actionable product recommendations. "Here's the use case we're missing, here's how big it is, here's what we'd need to build, here's why it matters now." You bring receipts. Own customer discovery for new product surfaces. When the team is exploring a new direction — a new endpoint, a new pricing model, a new market segment — you're the person who goes deep. You map the landscape, talk to the right people, and come back with a clear picture of whether it's worth pursuing and how to win. You've done this at the 0-to-1 stage and you've done it at scale. You know the difference. Be the voice of the customer in every product conversation. You're in the room when product and engineering decisions are being made. Not to slow things down — to make them sharper. You bring real user context that prevents the team from building technically impressive things nobody asked for. Close the feedback loop. When the team ships something based on your research, you go back to the customers who informed it. You validate. You measure. You learn. Discovery isn't a one-time phase — it's a continuous cycle that compounds the more you do it. Create content from customer conversations. The best product research doubles as marketing. Customer stories, use case write-ups, product positioning insights — you naturally produce content that helps the team sell and market, not just build. What We're Looking For Ex-founder energy. You've built something from scratch — ideally in dev tools or technical infrastructure. You know what it feels like to talk to your first 100 customers and figure out product-market fit by hand. That instinct doesn't come from reading about it. YC background is a major plus. Genuinely technical. You don't need to be writing production code, but you need to understand the product deeply enough to have credible conversations with developers. "Engineer" should be somewhere in your background, or you should be the kind of person who can vibe-code a working prototype and talk fluently about APIs, SDKs, and developer workflows. You can't do discovery on a technical product if you don't understand how it works. Exceptional communicator. You're great on camera, great on calls, great in writing. You can talk to a senior ML engineer about their RAG pipeline and then turn that conversation into a crisp internal brief that changes what the team builds. You're organized, you follow up, and people enjoy talking to you. Executor, not theorist. You don't produce 30-page research reports that nobody reads. You produce clear recommendations with enough evidence to act on, and you move fast enough that your insights are still relevant when you share them. You bias toward action. Comfortable with ambiguity. There's no playbook for this role at Firecrawl yet. You're building the customer discovery function from scratch. If you need a manager to tell you who to talk to and what questions to ask, this isn't the role. If you thrive when you get to figure it out — keep reading. Backgrounds that tend to do well: Ex-founders in the dev tools or API infrastructure space who understand 0-to-1 customer discovery. Technical PMs who've done real discovery work (not just roadmap management). Developer advocates who went deep on product strategy, not just content. People from the YC network who understand how early-stage companies find product-market fit. Engineers who realized they were better at talking to customers than writing code — and leaned into it. What We're NOT Looking For Traditional product managers. If your experience is writing PRDs, grooming backlogs, and running sprint planning — that's not this. We need someone who's in the field, not in Jira. Consultants or freelancers. We need someone embedded in the team who builds deep context over time. If your background is mostly advisory work or short engagements, the learning curve will be too steep and the insights too shallow. People who aren't technical enough. If you can't hold your own in a conversation about web scraping, API design, LLMs, or developer infrastructure — you won't be credible with our customers and you won't be useful to our engineering team. You don't need to be an engineer. But you need to be deeply comfortable in technical territory. Conference-circuit types. If your version of "customer discovery" is networking at events and collecting business cards, that's not what we mean. We mean sitting down with a developer, understanding their architecture, and figuring out where Firecrawl fits — or doesn't. Slow movers. We're a 26-person company competing in a market that's moving at light speed. If you need weeks to synthesize findings or months to build conviction on a recommendation, the window will have closed. A Note On Pace We operate at an absurd level of urgency because the window for what we're building won't stay open forever. If that excites you, keep reading. If it doesn't, no hard feelings — but this role probably isn't for you. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Head of Marketing  

    - Sacramento County
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl ac... Read More
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl acquires and activates users — across content, SEO/GEO, product marketing, partnerships, social, and emerging agent-first distribution channels. This is not a narrow channel role. You'll run the operating system behind our signup growth: pacing, channel mix, performance diagnosis, prioritization, and team execution. You'll work closely with Eric, who owns growth strategy and the major bets, while you own turning that strategy into a machine that performs every single week. Salary Range: $180,000–$240,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees in San Francisco, CA. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.1% Location: San Francisco, CA (In-person) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 5+ years in marketing or growth leadership at a technical or developer-facing product Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just over a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get clean, structured web data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure for the AI era. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Own weekly signup pacing and growth across core acquisition channels — you're accountable to the number, not just the strategy Build a defensible signup mix across SEO/GEO, partnerships, brand, and other durable channels that compound over time Run cross-channel planning, prioritization, and execution — including managing channel owners across content, PMM, partnerships, brand, and distribution Run weekly performance reviews: diagnose misses, identify what's working, and ship corrective action plans fast Partner with product and engineering on activation, onboarding, and growth constraints that live outside marketing's direct control Keep Eric focused on strategy and major bets — not on stitching the whole machine together week to week What We're Looking For A true operator, not a strategist. You've owned a growth number before — not advised on one. You know the difference between a channel that's underperforming and a channel that needs to be killed, and you make that call without waiting for someone else to tell you. Experienced running marketing for a technical or developer-facing product. You understand how developers discover tools, evaluate them, and decide to actually use them. You've built growth systems for an audience that hates being marketed to. Strong management instincts. You can run a team with a mix of channel specialists, create cadence, drive accountability, and keep everyone moving in the same direction — without needing perfect information to do it. Fluent in modern distribution. SEO/GEO, content, product launches, AI-native discovery — you have real operational depth across multiple channels, not just talking points. Good messaging taste. You're not a pure brand specialist, but you know what good looks like. You can maintain a high bar across everything that goes out without being the bottleneck. Comfortable working directly with founders. No marketing committee. No approval layers. You'll have a direct line to Eric and be expected to push back, make calls, and own the outcome. Backgrounds that often do well: head of growth or marketing at a developer tools or API-first company, early marketing leader at a PLG SaaS startup, founder-marketer who built a growth engine from scratch. What We're NOT Looking For Marketing leaders who are great at strategy decks and weak on execution People who need a fully-staffed team under them before they can move the needle Anyone who mistakes activity — campaigns launched, emails sent, content published — for growth A Note On Pace We're a small team doing a lot. Roles here are loosely defined on purpose — you'll own things that don't have a clear owner yet, and that's a feature, not a bug. If you need your scope fully defined before you can move, this probably isn't the right fit. If you want to build something that matters inside one of the fastest-growing AI infrastructure companies in the world, let's talk. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Head of Marketing  

    - Fayette County
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl ac... Read More
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl acquires and activates users — across content, SEO/GEO, product marketing, partnerships, social, and emerging agent-first distribution channels. This is not a narrow channel role. You'll run the operating system behind our signup growth: pacing, channel mix, performance diagnosis, prioritization, and team execution. You'll work closely with Eric, who owns growth strategy and the major bets, while you own turning that strategy into a machine that performs every single week. Salary Range: $180,000–$240,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees in San Francisco, CA. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.1% Location: San Francisco, CA (In-person) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 5+ years in marketing or growth leadership at a technical or developer-facing product Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just over a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get clean, structured web data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure for the AI era. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Own weekly signup pacing and growth across core acquisition channels — you're accountable to the number, not just the strategy Build a defensible signup mix across SEO/GEO, partnerships, brand, and other durable channels that compound over time Run cross-channel planning, prioritization, and execution — including managing channel owners across content, PMM, partnerships, brand, and distribution Run weekly performance reviews: diagnose misses, identify what's working, and ship corrective action plans fast Partner with product and engineering on activation, onboarding, and growth constraints that live outside marketing's direct control Keep Eric focused on strategy and major bets — not on stitching the whole machine together week to week What We're Looking For A true operator, not a strategist. You've owned a growth number before — not advised on one. You know the difference between a channel that's underperforming and a channel that needs to be killed, and you make that call without waiting for someone else to tell you. Experienced running marketing for a technical or developer-facing product. You understand how developers discover tools, evaluate them, and decide to actually use them. You've built growth systems for an audience that hates being marketed to. Strong management instincts. You can run a team with a mix of channel specialists, create cadence, drive accountability, and keep everyone moving in the same direction — without needing perfect information to do it. Fluent in modern distribution. SEO/GEO, content, product launches, AI-native discovery — you have real operational depth across multiple channels, not just talking points. Good messaging taste. You're not a pure brand specialist, but you know what good looks like. You can maintain a high bar across everything that goes out without being the bottleneck. Comfortable working directly with founders. No marketing committee. No approval layers. You'll have a direct line to Eric and be expected to push back, make calls, and own the outcome. Backgrounds that often do well: head of growth or marketing at a developer tools or API-first company, early marketing leader at a PLG SaaS startup, founder-marketer who built a growth engine from scratch. What We're NOT Looking For Marketing leaders who are great at strategy decks and weak on execution People who need a fully-staffed team under them before they can move the needle Anyone who mistakes activity — campaigns launched, emails sent, content published — for growth A Note On Pace We're a small team doing a lot. Roles here are loosely defined on purpose — you'll own things that don't have a clear owner yet, and that's a feature, not a bug. If you need your scope fully defined before you can move, this probably isn't the right fit. If you want to build something that matters inside one of the fastest-growing AI infrastructure companies in the world, let's talk. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Head of Marketing  

    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl ac... Read More
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl acquires and activates users — across content, SEO/GEO, product marketing, partnerships, social, and emerging agent-first distribution channels. This is not a narrow channel role. You'll run the operating system behind our signup growth: pacing, channel mix, performance diagnosis, prioritization, and team execution. You'll work closely with Eric, who owns growth strategy and the major bets, while you own turning that strategy into a machine that performs every single week. Salary Range: $180,000–$240,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees in San Francisco, CA. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.1% Location: San Francisco, CA (In-person) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 5+ years in marketing or growth leadership at a technical or developer-facing product Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just over a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get clean, structured web data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure for the AI era. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Own weekly signup pacing and growth across core acquisition channels — you're accountable to the number, not just the strategy Build a defensible signup mix across SEO/GEO, partnerships, brand, and other durable channels that compound over time Run cross-channel planning, prioritization, and execution — including managing channel owners across content, PMM, partnerships, brand, and distribution Run weekly performance reviews: diagnose misses, identify what's working, and ship corrective action plans fast Partner with product and engineering on activation, onboarding, and growth constraints that live outside marketing's direct control Keep Eric focused on strategy and major bets — not on stitching the whole machine together week to week What We're Looking For A true operator, not a strategist. You've owned a growth number before — not advised on one. You know the difference between a channel that's underperforming and a channel that needs to be killed, and you make that call without waiting for someone else to tell you. Experienced running marketing for a technical or developer-facing product. You understand how developers discover tools, evaluate them, and decide to actually use them. You've built growth systems for an audience that hates being marketed to. Strong management instincts. You can run a team with a mix of channel specialists, create cadence, drive accountability, and keep everyone moving in the same direction — without needing perfect information to do it. Fluent in modern distribution. SEO/GEO, content, product launches, AI-native discovery — you have real operational depth across multiple channels, not just talking points. Good messaging taste. You're not a pure brand specialist, but you know what good looks like. You can maintain a high bar across everything that goes out without being the bottleneck. Comfortable working directly with founders. No marketing committee. No approval layers. You'll have a direct line to Eric and be expected to push back, make calls, and own the outcome. Backgrounds that often do well: head of growth or marketing at a developer tools or API-first company, early marketing leader at a PLG SaaS startup, founder-marketer who built a growth engine from scratch. What We're NOT Looking For Marketing leaders who are great at strategy decks and weak on execution People who need a fully-staffed team under them before they can move the needle Anyone who mistakes activity — campaigns launched, emails sent, content published — for growth A Note On Pace We're a small team doing a lot. Roles here are loosely defined on purpose — you'll own things that don't have a clear owner yet, and that's a feature, not a bug. If you need your scope fully defined before you can move, this probably isn't the right fit. If you want to build something that matters inside one of the fastest-growing AI infrastructure companies in the world, let's talk. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Product Researcher  

    - Kern County
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl... Read More
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl should build next — and why. Right now, our engineers are shipping great infrastructure, and our support and sales teams are handling inbound well. But the bigger product bets — the ones that turn a good tool into a dominant platform — are stalling because nobody has the bandwidth to do real customer discovery. We have a state-of-the-art commercial research paper search endpoint with one customer using it. We have answers, reranking, monitoring — strong features that aren't getting the focused attention they deserve. You fix that. This isn't a PM role where you write tickets and manage a backlog. You're in the field. You talk to customers — a lot of them. You find the patterns, source the insights, and bring them back to the team in a way that changes what we prioritize. You're the bridge between what developers are actually trying to do and what we're building. Salary Range: $160,000–$230,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.15% Location: San Francisco, CA (Hybrid) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 3+ years in product research, customer discovery, technical PM, or founder-level product work — with demonstrated results Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get LLM-ready data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure superintelligence will use to gather data on the web. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Talk to customers constantly. This is the job. You're running 15-25 customer conversations a week — discovery calls, user interviews, onboarding sessions, churn conversations. You're not surveying people. You're having real conversations that uncover what they're building, where they're stuck, and what would make Firecrawl indispensable to their workflow. You develop a sixth sense for what customers say versus what they actually need. Find the insights that change priorities. You don't just report what customers said — you synthesize it. You spot the patterns across dozens of conversations and turn them into clear, actionable product recommendations. "Here's the use case we're missing, here's how big it is, here's what we'd need to build, here's why it matters now." You bring receipts. Own customer discovery for new product surfaces. When the team is exploring a new direction — a new endpoint, a new pricing model, a new market segment — you're the person who goes deep. You map the landscape, talk to the right people, and come back with a clear picture of whether it's worth pursuing and how to win. You've done this at the 0-to-1 stage and you've done it at scale. You know the difference. Be the voice of the customer in every product conversation. You're in the room when product and engineering decisions are being made. Not to slow things down — to make them sharper. You bring real user context that prevents the team from building technically impressive things nobody asked for. Close the feedback loop. When the team ships something based on your research, you go back to the customers who informed it. You validate. You measure. You learn. Discovery isn't a one-time phase — it's a continuous cycle that compounds the more you do it. Create content from customer conversations. The best product research doubles as marketing. Customer stories, use case write-ups, product positioning insights — you naturally produce content that helps the team sell and market, not just build. What We're Looking For Ex-founder energy. You've built something from scratch — ideally in dev tools or technical infrastructure. You know what it feels like to talk to your first 100 customers and figure out product-market fit by hand. That instinct doesn't come from reading about it. YC background is a major plus. Genuinely technical. You don't need to be writing production code, but you need to understand the product deeply enough to have credible conversations with developers. "Engineer" should be somewhere in your background, or you should be the kind of person who can vibe-code a working prototype and talk fluently about APIs, SDKs, and developer workflows. You can't do discovery on a technical product if you don't understand how it works. Exceptional communicator. You're great on camera, great on calls, great in writing. You can talk to a senior ML engineer about their RAG pipeline and then turn that conversation into a crisp internal brief that changes what the team builds. You're organized, you follow up, and people enjoy talking to you. Executor, not theorist. You don't produce 30-page research reports that nobody reads. You produce clear recommendations with enough evidence to act on, and you move fast enough that your insights are still relevant when you share them. You bias toward action. Comfortable with ambiguity. There's no playbook for this role at Firecrawl yet. You're building the customer discovery function from scratch. If you need a manager to tell you who to talk to and what questions to ask, this isn't the role. If you thrive when you get to figure it out — keep reading. Backgrounds that tend to do well: Ex-founders in the dev tools or API infrastructure space who understand 0-to-1 customer discovery. Technical PMs who've done real discovery work (not just roadmap management). Developer advocates who went deep on product strategy, not just content. People from the YC network who understand how early-stage companies find product-market fit. Engineers who realized they were better at talking to customers than writing code — and leaned into it. What We're NOT Looking For Traditional product managers. If your experience is writing PRDs, grooming backlogs, and running sprint planning — that's not this. We need someone who's in the field, not in Jira. Consultants or freelancers. We need someone embedded in the team who builds deep context over time. If your background is mostly advisory work or short engagements, the learning curve will be too steep and the insights too shallow. People who aren't technical enough. If you can't hold your own in a conversation about web scraping, API design, LLMs, or developer infrastructure — you won't be credible with our customers and you won't be useful to our engineering team. You don't need to be an engineer. But you need to be deeply comfortable in technical territory. Conference-circuit types. If your version of "customer discovery" is networking at events and collecting business cards, that's not what we mean. We mean sitting down with a developer, understanding their architecture, and figuring out where Firecrawl fits — or doesn't. Slow movers. We're a 26-person company competing in a market that's moving at light speed. If you need weeks to synthesize findings or months to build conviction on a recommendation, the window will have closed. A Note On Pace We operate at an absurd level of urgency because the window for what we're building won't stay open forever. If that excites you, keep reading. If it doesn't, no hard feelings — but this role probably isn't for you. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Product Researcher  

    - Orange County
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl... Read More
    Product Researcher You'll be the person who figures out what Firecrawl should build next — and why. Right now, our engineers are shipping great infrastructure, and our support and sales teams are handling inbound well. But the bigger product bets — the ones that turn a good tool into a dominant platform — are stalling because nobody has the bandwidth to do real customer discovery. We have a state-of-the-art commercial research paper search endpoint with one customer using it. We have answers, reranking, monitoring — strong features that aren't getting the focused attention they deserve. You fix that. This isn't a PM role where you write tickets and manage a backlog. You're in the field. You talk to customers — a lot of them. You find the patterns, source the insights, and bring them back to the team in a way that changes what we prioritize. You're the bridge between what developers are actually trying to do and what we're building. Salary Range: $160,000–$230,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.15% Location: San Francisco, CA (Hybrid) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 3+ years in product research, customer discovery, technical PM, or founder-level product work — with demonstrated results Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get LLM-ready data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure superintelligence will use to gather data on the web. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Talk to customers constantly. This is the job. You're running 15-25 customer conversations a week — discovery calls, user interviews, onboarding sessions, churn conversations. You're not surveying people. You're having real conversations that uncover what they're building, where they're stuck, and what would make Firecrawl indispensable to their workflow. You develop a sixth sense for what customers say versus what they actually need. Find the insights that change priorities. You don't just report what customers said — you synthesize it. You spot the patterns across dozens of conversations and turn them into clear, actionable product recommendations. "Here's the use case we're missing, here's how big it is, here's what we'd need to build, here's why it matters now." You bring receipts. Own customer discovery for new product surfaces. When the team is exploring a new direction — a new endpoint, a new pricing model, a new market segment — you're the person who goes deep. You map the landscape, talk to the right people, and come back with a clear picture of whether it's worth pursuing and how to win. You've done this at the 0-to-1 stage and you've done it at scale. You know the difference. Be the voice of the customer in every product conversation. You're in the room when product and engineering decisions are being made. Not to slow things down — to make them sharper. You bring real user context that prevents the team from building technically impressive things nobody asked for. Close the feedback loop. When the team ships something based on your research, you go back to the customers who informed it. You validate. You measure. You learn. Discovery isn't a one-time phase — it's a continuous cycle that compounds the more you do it. Create content from customer conversations. The best product research doubles as marketing. Customer stories, use case write-ups, product positioning insights — you naturally produce content that helps the team sell and market, not just build. What We're Looking For Ex-founder energy. You've built something from scratch — ideally in dev tools or technical infrastructure. You know what it feels like to talk to your first 100 customers and figure out product-market fit by hand. That instinct doesn't come from reading about it. YC background is a major plus. Genuinely technical. You don't need to be writing production code, but you need to understand the product deeply enough to have credible conversations with developers. "Engineer" should be somewhere in your background, or you should be the kind of person who can vibe-code a working prototype and talk fluently about APIs, SDKs, and developer workflows. You can't do discovery on a technical product if you don't understand how it works. Exceptional communicator. You're great on camera, great on calls, great in writing. You can talk to a senior ML engineer about their RAG pipeline and then turn that conversation into a crisp internal brief that changes what the team builds. You're organized, you follow up, and people enjoy talking to you. Executor, not theorist. You don't produce 30-page research reports that nobody reads. You produce clear recommendations with enough evidence to act on, and you move fast enough that your insights are still relevant when you share them. You bias toward action. Comfortable with ambiguity. There's no playbook for this role at Firecrawl yet. You're building the customer discovery function from scratch. If you need a manager to tell you who to talk to and what questions to ask, this isn't the role. If you thrive when you get to figure it out — keep reading. Backgrounds that tend to do well: Ex-founders in the dev tools or API infrastructure space who understand 0-to-1 customer discovery. Technical PMs who've done real discovery work (not just roadmap management). Developer advocates who went deep on product strategy, not just content. People from the YC network who understand how early-stage companies find product-market fit. Engineers who realized they were better at talking to customers than writing code — and leaned into it. What We're NOT Looking For Traditional product managers. If your experience is writing PRDs, grooming backlogs, and running sprint planning — that's not this. We need someone who's in the field, not in Jira. Consultants or freelancers. We need someone embedded in the team who builds deep context over time. If your background is mostly advisory work or short engagements, the learning curve will be too steep and the insights too shallow. People who aren't technical enough. If you can't hold your own in a conversation about web scraping, API design, LLMs, or developer infrastructure — you won't be credible with our customers and you won't be useful to our engineering team. You don't need to be an engineer. But you need to be deeply comfortable in technical territory. Conference-circuit types. If your version of "customer discovery" is networking at events and collecting business cards, that's not what we mean. We mean sitting down with a developer, understanding their architecture, and figuring out where Firecrawl fits — or doesn't. Slow movers. We're a 26-person company competing in a market that's moving at light speed. If you need weeks to synthesize findings or months to build conviction on a recommendation, the window will have closed. A Note On Pace We operate at an absurd level of urgency because the window for what we're building won't stay open forever. If that excites you, keep reading. If it doesn't, no hard feelings — but this role probably isn't for you. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Head of Marketing  

    - Lubbock County
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl ac... Read More
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl acquires and activates users — across content, SEO/GEO, product marketing, partnerships, social, and emerging agent-first distribution channels. This is not a narrow channel role. You'll run the operating system behind our signup growth: pacing, channel mix, performance diagnosis, prioritization, and team execution. You'll work closely with Eric, who owns growth strategy and the major bets, while you own turning that strategy into a machine that performs every single week. Salary Range: $180,000–$240,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees in San Francisco, CA. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.1% Location: San Francisco, CA (In-person) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 5+ years in marketing or growth leadership at a technical or developer-facing product Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just over a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get clean, structured web data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure for the AI era. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Own weekly signup pacing and growth across core acquisition channels — you're accountable to the number, not just the strategy Build a defensible signup mix across SEO/GEO, partnerships, brand, and other durable channels that compound over time Run cross-channel planning, prioritization, and execution — including managing channel owners across content, PMM, partnerships, brand, and distribution Run weekly performance reviews: diagnose misses, identify what's working, and ship corrective action plans fast Partner with product and engineering on activation, onboarding, and growth constraints that live outside marketing's direct control Keep Eric focused on strategy and major bets — not on stitching the whole machine together week to week What We're Looking For A true operator, not a strategist. You've owned a growth number before — not advised on one. You know the difference between a channel that's underperforming and a channel that needs to be killed, and you make that call without waiting for someone else to tell you. Experienced running marketing for a technical or developer-facing product. You understand how developers discover tools, evaluate them, and decide to actually use them. You've built growth systems for an audience that hates being marketed to. Strong management instincts. You can run a team with a mix of channel specialists, create cadence, drive accountability, and keep everyone moving in the same direction — without needing perfect information to do it. Fluent in modern distribution. SEO/GEO, content, product launches, AI-native discovery — you have real operational depth across multiple channels, not just talking points. Good messaging taste. You're not a pure brand specialist, but you know what good looks like. You can maintain a high bar across everything that goes out without being the bottleneck. Comfortable working directly with founders. No marketing committee. No approval layers. You'll have a direct line to Eric and be expected to push back, make calls, and own the outcome. Backgrounds that often do well: head of growth or marketing at a developer tools or API-first company, early marketing leader at a PLG SaaS startup, founder-marketer who built a growth engine from scratch. What We're NOT Looking For Marketing leaders who are great at strategy decks and weak on execution People who need a fully-staffed team under them before they can move the needle Anyone who mistakes activity — campaigns launched, emails sent, content published — for growth A Note On Pace We're a small team doing a lot. Roles here are loosely defined on purpose — you'll own things that don't have a clear owner yet, and that's a feature, not a bug. If you need your scope fully defined before you can move, this probably isn't the right fit. If you want to build something that matters inside one of the fastest-growing AI infrastructure companies in the world, let's talk. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less
  • Remote Head of Marketing  

    - El Paso County
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl ac... Read More
    Head of Marketing You'll own the growth engine behind how Firecrawl acquires and activates users — across content, SEO/GEO, product marketing, partnerships, social, and emerging agent-first distribution channels. This is not a narrow channel role. You'll run the operating system behind our signup growth: pacing, channel mix, performance diagnosis, prioritization, and team execution. You'll work closely with Eric, who owns growth strategy and the major bets, while you own turning that strategy into a machine that performs every single week. Salary Range: $180,000–$240,000/year (Range shown is for U.S.-based employees in San Francisco, CA. Compensation outside the U.S. is adjusted fairly based on your country's cost of living. You can explore how we calculate this here: https://www.firecrawl.dev/careers/compensation .) Equity Range: Up to 0.1% Location: San Francisco, CA (In-person) Job Type: Full-Time Experience: 5+ years in marketing or growth leadership at a technical or developer-facing product Visa: US Citizenship/Visa required About Firecrawl Firecrawl is the easiest way to extract data from the web. Developers use us to reliably convert URLs into LLM-ready markdown or structured data with a single API call. In just over a year, we've hit 8 figures in ARR and 100k+ GitHub stars by building the fastest way for developers to get clean, structured web data. We're a small, fast-moving, technical team building essential infrastructure for the AI era. We ship fast and deep. What You'll Do Own weekly signup pacing and growth across core acquisition channels — you're accountable to the number, not just the strategy Build a defensible signup mix across SEO/GEO, partnerships, brand, and other durable channels that compound over time Run cross-channel planning, prioritization, and execution — including managing channel owners across content, PMM, partnerships, brand, and distribution Run weekly performance reviews: diagnose misses, identify what's working, and ship corrective action plans fast Partner with product and engineering on activation, onboarding, and growth constraints that live outside marketing's direct control Keep Eric focused on strategy and major bets — not on stitching the whole machine together week to week What We're Looking For A true operator, not a strategist. You've owned a growth number before — not advised on one. You know the difference between a channel that's underperforming and a channel that needs to be killed, and you make that call without waiting for someone else to tell you. Experienced running marketing for a technical or developer-facing product. You understand how developers discover tools, evaluate them, and decide to actually use them. You've built growth systems for an audience that hates being marketed to. Strong management instincts. You can run a team with a mix of channel specialists, create cadence, drive accountability, and keep everyone moving in the same direction — without needing perfect information to do it. Fluent in modern distribution. SEO/GEO, content, product launches, AI-native discovery — you have real operational depth across multiple channels, not just talking points. Good messaging taste. You're not a pure brand specialist, but you know what good looks like. You can maintain a high bar across everything that goes out without being the bottleneck. Comfortable working directly with founders. No marketing committee. No approval layers. You'll have a direct line to Eric and be expected to push back, make calls, and own the outcome. Backgrounds that often do well: head of growth or marketing at a developer tools or API-first company, early marketing leader at a PLG SaaS startup, founder-marketer who built a growth engine from scratch. What We're NOT Looking For Marketing leaders who are great at strategy decks and weak on execution People who need a fully-staffed team under them before they can move the needle Anyone who mistakes activity — campaigns launched, emails sent, content published — for growth A Note On Pace We're a small team doing a lot. Roles here are loosely defined on purpose — you'll own things that don't have a clear owner yet, and that's a feature, not a bug. If you need your scope fully defined before you can move, this probably isn't the right fit. If you want to build something that matters inside one of the fastest-growing AI infrastructure companies in the world, let's talk. Benefits take the time you need to recharge Parental leave — 12 weeks fully paid, for moms and dads Wellness stipend — $100/month for the gym, therapy, massages, or whatever keeps you human Learning Read Less

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