Software Engineering Manager - Agentic AI

Airslate · Poland · SignNow

Remote · globallead
About airSlate
airSlate is a global SaaS technology company that develops no-code workflow automation, electronic signature, and document management solutions. Our award-winning products - SignNow, pdfFiller, DocHub, altaFlow, Instapage, and US Legal Forms - serve over hundreds of millions of  users and more than one million customers worldwide, helping organizations of every size digitize processes, improve efficiency, and transform how they work.
 
We’re in an exciting phase of growth and transformation, with teammates in more than 20 countries across three continents and main hubs in the United States, Poland, Romania, Ukraine and Philippines
At airSlate, we’re building value for customers and a culture where growth and innovation go hand in hand. We’re looking for people eager to shape products, scale a company, and thrive in a fast-moving environment.

About SignNow team:

We are a passionate and ambitious team of 140+ people on a mission to succeed with our award-winning signature solution – SignNow.

SignNow empowers over 28 million people at companies across the world to move fast with everything they need to send and eSign their documents. Increase productivity with document workflows, impress customers, and save money while maximizing ROI with SignNow.

And now, we are looking for a Software Engineering Manager – Agentic QE who is prepared to contribute to the next chapter of our company's growth.

You came up through software engineering, moved into automation and quality, and have been the de-facto quality authority on your team before you had the title. You think in systems, you stay hands-on, and you're genuinely excited about what agentic AI means for how software gets built and validated. This role is for you.

As Software Engineering Manager – Agentic QE, you will lead a team of 6–10 Automation Quality Engineers, own our existing automation estate, and drive a deliberate transition from deterministic pipelines toward autonomous test agents.