Senior Software Engineer, Agentic Development
Solovis builds portfolio management and analytics software for institutional investors: the endowments, foundations, family offices, and asset managers responsible for some of the most complex capital in the world. We are backed by Insight Partners and growing fast, investing in product, people, and the technology that drives client outcomes. We've made a company-wide commitment to be AI-native by end of 2025. Not a pilot program, not a future roadmap item — an active transformation already underway across every team. Engineering is at the center of it.
We're building out our agentic development team and hiring engineers who are already working this way in production. If you've been ahead of your peers on this and want to be somewhere that matches your pace, this is worth a look.
The Role
This is a hands-on engineering role. You own features end-to-end, ship production systems using agentic workflows as your default mode of work, and take genuine accountability for what you build — including when things break. You create your own momentum through strong requirements discipline, continuous validation of agent output, and a concrete understanding of when to push forward and when to stop and reset.
Your stakeholders are sophisticated. They expect quality, reliability, and engineers who think beyond the ticket. The best engineers here earn that trust quickly and build systems that last.
What You'll Do
- Deliver features and modernizations across our stack using agentic development end-to-end
- Build and operate multi-agent workflows where distinct roles run in parallel and in coordination
- Work in brownfield environments with the same discipline as greenfield builds
- Validate agent output and know when to intervene — grounded in how well requirements were set upfront
- Pair with existing engineers to transfer agentic working habits through real production work
- Contribute consistently to sprint delivery and take ownership of quality over time
What We're Looking For
Engineering Background
- 5–9 years of professional software engineering experience
- Strong fluency in Java or Python on AWS, or C# on Azure
- Production ownership history: you've shipped non-trivial systems and been accountable when things went wrong
- At least one significant out-of-depth experience — a stack switch, a domain change, or a greenfield build in unfamiliar territory
Agentic Development Experience
- 6+ months of serious, production-grade agentic tool use (Claude Code, Cursor, or equivalent) — production work only, not pilots or experiments
- Demonstrated ability to build product with AI, not just use AI within existing workflows
- Concrete understanding of when to let an agent run versus when to intervene, grounded in how well requirements were established before the work started
- Experience reviewing and validating work you did not write, including agent-generated output
- Familiarity with building multi-agent frameworks where distinct roles operate concurrently
Who Won't Thrive Here
If you're looking for a role where the requirements are always airtight before work starts, agents are a nice-to-have, or someone else validates the output — this isn't it. This role requires comfort with ambiguity, genuine ownership over what you ship, and the discipline to know when to push forward and when to stop and reset.
We're not a team that protects engineers from accountability. If a system breaks, you're in it. If an agent produced something wrong and it shipped, that's on you too. We operate more like a gym than a spa — growth here is intentional and sometimes uncomfortable, and that's exactly how we like it.
If that's the environment where you do your best work, we want to talk.
Interview Process
We want this to be a great fit for both sides. After applying, you'll complete a short set of aptitude and personality assessments before connecting with a recruiter. Everyone goes through them, from interns to our CEO. The invitation will come from a member of our recruiting team — keep an eye on your inbox, and check your spam folder just in case.