Developer who connects with other developers

IRL Events Team

  • Location

    Remote

  • Timezone(s)

    GMT +2 to GMT -8

About PostHog

Product development used to mean manually writing code, running analysis, diagnosing bugs, and rolling out changes using dozens of tools.

PostHog is the only platform that acts like a co-pilot for you (and your AI agents) to do it all – autonomously.

We started with open-source product analytics, launched out of Y Combinator's W20 cohort. We've since shipped more than a dozen products, including:

  • PostHog Code, the only AI devtool that understands your product, not just your codebase.

  • A built-in data warehouse, so users can query product and customer data together using custom SQL insights.

  • PostHog AI, an AI-powered analyst that answers product questions, helps users find useful session recordings, and writes custom SQL queries.

We are:

  1. Product-led. More than 450,000 organizations have installed PostHog, mostly driven by word-of-mouth. We have intensely strong product-market fit.

  2. Default alive. Revenue is growing incredibly quickly, and we're very efficient. We raise money to push ambition and grow faster, not to keep the lights on.

  3. Well-funded. We've raised more than $180m from some of the world's top investors. We're set up for a long, ambitious journey.

We're focused on building an awesome product for end users, hiring exceptional teammates, shipping fast, and being as weird as possible.

 

Things we care about

  • Transparency: Everyone can read about our roadmap, how we pay (or even let go of) people, our strategy, and how we work, in our public company handbook. Internally, we share revenue, notes and slides from board meetings, and fundraising plans, so everyone has the context they need to make good decisions.

  • Autonomy: We don’t tell anyone what to do. Everyone chooses what to work on next based on what's going to have the biggest impact on our customers, and what they find interesting and motivating to work on. Engineers lead product teams and make product decisions. Teams are flexible and easy to change when needed.

  • Shipping fast: Why not now? We want to build a lot of products; we can't do that shipping at a normal pace. We've built the company around small teams – autonomous, highly-efficient groups of cracked engineers who can outship much larger companies because they own their products end-to-end.

  • Time for building: Nothing gets shipped in a meeting. We're a natively remote company. We default to async communication – PRs > Issues > Slack. Tuesdays and Thursdays are meeting-free days, and we prioritize heads down building time over perfect coordination. This will be the most productive job you've ever had.

  • Ambition: We want to solve big problems. We strongly believe that aiming for the best possible upside, and sometimes missing, is better than never trying. We're optimistic about what's possible and our ability to get there.

  • Being weird: Weird means redesigning an already world-class website for the 5th time. It means shipping literally every product that relates to customer data. It means building an objectively unnecessary developer toy with dubious shareholder value. Doing weird stuff is a competitive advantage. And it's fun.

Job Summary

We're looking for someone who will help activate PostHog's online watering holes. The Developer who connects with other developers tends to people, not pipelines. The job is to make PostHog users (and their products) successful outside our product, get them having real conversations with each other on the internet, and carry PostHog's values into every online surface — the forum, the Discord, the subreddit, livestreams, AMAs, the DMs you'd never see. What starts with broad engagement is meant to lead to identifying and empowering superfans.

You'll have two bets and go deep to start. With plenty more challenges ahead:

What you’ll be doing

Bet 1: Grow online conversations between users. PostHog has a forum, a Discord, a subreddit, a newsletter, and a lot of content — but conversations between users are sparser than they should be. Forum traffic has declined year-over-year. Reddit engagement is low. You'll own growing the volume and quality of conversations across all three surfaces:

  • Forum — slow, indexed depth. Concrete opening project: clean up out-of-date questions, clarify what the forum is for, start actively triaging and seeding. The decline isn't because users don't want to talk; it's because no one is doing the maintenance and hosting work.

  • Discord — raw, real-time, not indexed. Currently in test mode; you take it over fully and aim for the 20% DAU default-alive benchmark. We haven't proven Discord will compound for us long-term, but the size of comparable companies' servers says it should. If it doesn't, you're the person who calls it.

  • Reddit — public, discoverable. Narrow scope: recruit passionate community members to help run the subreddit, and personally lead high-leverage moments like AMAs. Not daily triage.

You'll also seed conversations on hub topics like growth engineering, design for product engineers, and fundraising for founders, and figure out the strategic question hiding underneath: when does each surface get used, for what?

Bet 2: Spotlight users and build a superfans operating system. We have founders who are fans, OSS contributors, event organizers, forum power users, builder group leaders, and customers doing interesting work. Right now nobody keeps a list, the relationships are personality-dependent, and we mention great customers once in a case study and then never again. You'll build the system — identify, spotlight, enable, reward.

One specific track within this: a consistent flow of people engaging in the forum, open source contributions, users sharing what they're building in chat and livestreams. Make it easy to start in all these online spaces, recognize existing contributors meaningfully, and develop a reward system that goes beyond a merged PR. You'll also deal with potential negative incidents or breaking of guidelines that may invariably happen.

You'll also work closely with the IRL events team on the bridge between offline and online (builder groups becoming online regulars, online conversations seeding meetups), organizing online "events," and pick up sidequests such as a new community surface all together (would building our own social network be the best way to achieve these goals?)

What you won't be doing

❌ Turning these channels into customer support — what we're expressly trying to avoid

❌ Managing Twitter/LinkedIn/Youtube social — our social poster owns these

❌ Running "community" as a top-of-funnel signup engine — if signups happen, fine, but they're not the goal

❌ Being the loudest voice in every channel — the key here is identifying voices, not raising your own

❌ Day-to-day Reddit triage or moderation — you enable community members to do that

Requirements

  • Track record of building or stewarding an online community where high-quality conversations happened — forum, Discord, Slack, subreddit, doesn't matter which, results matter

  • Already an active PostHog user. Not "willing to learn it" — you're using PostHog in your own work today, you know the product surface area well enough to have a credible technical conversation with any user

  • Has been an active participant in developer communities (not just managed them from the outside)

  • Strong public writing/speaking — you'll be modeling the conversational standard you want users to meet

  • Embody PostHog's values in your day-to-day experiences

Nice to have:

  • OSS maintainer experience

  • Has run a developer-focused program before (champions, ambassadors, fellows, hackathons)

  • Has built an audience of their own (newsletter, podcast, YouTube, Twitter/X — any of it)

If you have a disability, please let us know if there's any way we can make the interview process better for you - we're happy to accommodate!

Meet the IRL Events Team

We help PostHog users learn and build together in real life (IRL)

Team members

Does pineapple belong on pizza?

Team is evenly split

We have a set system for compensation as part of being transparent. Salary varies based on location and level of experience.

Learn more about compensation

Location

(based on market rates)

Level

Step

Salary calculator

  1. Benchmark (United States - San Francisco, California) $185,000
  2. Level modifier 1
  3. Step modifier 0.95 - 1.04
Salary $175,750 - $192,400+ significant equity
We are open to paying well beyond these ranges for exceptional talent. If this is you, please apply.

  • Generous, transparent compensation & equityGenerous, transparent compensation & equity
  • Unlimited vacation (with a minimum!)Unlimited vacation (with a minimum!)
  • Two meeting-free days per weekTwo meeting-free days per week
  • Home officeHome office
  • Coworking creditCoworking credit
  • Private health, dental, and vision insurance.Private health, dental, and vision insurance.
  • Training budgetTraining budget
  • Access to our Hedge HouseAccess to our Hedge House
  • Carbon offsettingCarbon offsetting
  • Pension & 401k contributionsPension & 401k contributions
  • We hire and pay locallyWe hire and pay locally
  • Company offsitesCompany offsites

Get more details about all our benefits on the Careers page.

Q3 2026 objectives

These are the primary goals the team is prioritizing this quarter.

Launch a signature self-driving event series

Owner: Daniel Zaltsman

Rationale: Conferences are (still) wasteful; the weird, owned, curated format is the way we win (with weird).

Things we could do:

  • Test 3 formats
  • Pitch our format to partners
  • Curate ICP guest lists

We'll know we're successful when:

  • One format clearly wins because of glowing response and partner interest
Build the event-to-content flywheel

Owner: Daniel Zaltsman Kliment Minchev

Rationale: Our biggest unused leverage currently. We mostly lean on partners for video and social.

Things we could do:

  • Creator network
  • Handhelds at hacker houses
  • Footage-to-social pipeline
  • Feed s*itposts
  • Feed/feature builders and event guests in brand channels
  • Higher visibility partnerships and co-marketing

We'll know we're successful when:

  • Events ship content we drove and buzz from events climbs
  • Deepen our partnerships via IRL events co-hosting
Turn builder groups into curated collectives

Owner: Kliment Minchev

Rationale: Builder groups are unfocused and passive; collectives and hacker houses are rising.

Things we could do:

  • Rebrand to collectives
  • Reach a higher profile organizer
  • Embed in hacker houses
  • Target by ICP data dashboard here

We'll know we're successful when:

  • More collectives, more self-organization, and motion without our input

Sidequests

Sidequests are important areas of focus or things the team cares a lot about, but which aren't their primary goal.

Discord

Owner: Daniel Zaltsman

Motivation: Held in a working state (Daniel maintains until handoff) until the dev who talks to devs is hired. Adding engagement mechanisms and events.

Student program

Owner: Kliment Minchev

Motivation: Slowly increase footprint, pilot campus ambassador recruitment, but stay as an experiment until next steps and goals are clear.

Dreamforce

Owner: Daniel Zaltsman

Motivation: Explore a major presence at the event in order to accelerate adoption of PostHog Slack product.

We do 2-3 short interviews, then pay you to do some real-life (or close to real-life) work.

  • 1
    Application (You are here)
    Our talent team will review your application

    We're looking to see how your skills and experience align with our needs.

  • 2
    Culture interview
    30-min video call

    Our goal is to explore your motivations to join our team, learn why you’d be a great fit, and answer questions about us.

  • 3
    Technical interview
    45 minutes, varies by role

    You'll meet the hiring team who will evaluate skills needed to be successful in your role. No live coding.

  • 4
    Culture & Motivation interview
    20 minutes, varies by role

    You have reached the final boss. It's time to chat with one of our Blitzscale team members.

  • 5
    PostHog SuperDay
    Paid day of work

    You’ll meet a few more members of the team and work on an independent project. It's challenging, but most people say it's fun, and we'll pay you $1,000 for your efforts!

  • 6
    Offer
    Pop the champagne (after you sign)

    If everyone is happy, we’ll make you an offer to join us - YAY!

(Now for the fun part...)

Just fill out this painless form and we'll get back to you within a few days. Thanks in advance!

Seriously, just write a couple of sentences about why you love us and you'll be doing better than 90% of applications.

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