
AI travel search for frequent flyers
We are building a world-class search booking experience. In our vision of the world, you won’t book travel by opening ten tabs in Google Flights; you’ll book through a personalized AI assistant that understands everything about you and automatically arranges your trip for you.
We're looking for a founding engineer to join the our team of 3-4. You'll tackle everything from optimizing LLM performance and building evals to integrating APIs like Amadeus and Duffel. We have no shortage of customer interest and are bottlenecked entirely on product development. Your job will be to take customer feedback and improve our product, working shoulder-to-shoulder with the founder & the rest of founding team.
Bonus:
Our strongest candidates usually attended top schools (Berkeley, CMU, Waterloo, MIT) or worked at top companies.
We are a very small, close and ambitious team. We work in-person in San Francisco, five days a week out of an office in the Mission. We start at 10am and stay until the work is done—sometimes 7pm, sometimes midnight.
Our stack is a fairly standard setup of Postgres/FastAPI/Next. We wish we could write more Rust, but don’t often get the chance to.
We have unlimited vacation and a flexible travel policy. If you want to travel home and work remotely for a week, that’s cool as long as you’re still getting things done at a good pace (and tax/labor laws permit). We can’t provide fully hybrid or remote work arrangements.
Our interview cycle has three stages:
We move quickly and can make an offer within a few days if needed.
Stardrift is an AI assistant with the expertise of a top-tier travel agent. We're tackling an incredibly ambitious challenge: finding travel information that isn't captured in today's computer systems, transforming it into structured data, and using it to build a world-class booking experience.
Current search tools are missing a lot of information about the world. Which airplanes have Starlink? Why is CDG the worst airport in Europe to transfer through? When should you take the Northeast Corridor instead of flying?
Today's travelers open ten tabs in Google Flights and pray for the best. We're building something better: an AI that understands your preferences, filters all options, and books correctly-priced trips tailored to you. We're starting with corporate travel search in the domestic USA.
Getting this right is useful, challenging and valuable. Previous travel tech companies have become unicorns, like ITA Matrix (acquired by Google in 2005 for 1b+), Amex GBT (public, 4b+) and Booking.com (public, 150b+). With LLMs, we can do so much more: enable huge deals, reunite families for holidays, and open life-changing opportunities abroad.