Senior Full Stack Software Developer
Company: CoLab
Location: Greater St. John's Metropolitan Area (Remote)
Type: Full-time
Level: Senior
Remote: Yes
Posted: 2026-03-02
About this role
About CoLab
At CoLab, we want to help mechanical engineering teams bring life-changing products to market years sooner.
CoLab is a cloud based platform for engineering design review. We make it easy for subject matter experts (SMEs) across your business to access, evaluate, and comment on 2D drawings and 3D models. Our built-in AI peer checker, AutoReview, scans designs for common errors or non-compliance with your standards and guidelines. AutoReview creates markups and comments on your files, in context – just like a human checker.
With CoLab, human SMEs and AI work together to help you make better decisions and improve designs faster. We automatically capture knowledge from across your global business that would otherwise be buried in emails, spreadsheets, slide decks, and unknown locations in Sharepoint or PLM. Then, we make sure every lesson learned and every design guideline is applied exactly when it matters.
Companies like Johnson Controls, Komatsu, Schaeffler, and Polaris have launched products 40% faster, cut BOM costs by 50%, and reduced quality escapes by 15% in 1 year.
About the Role
As we've grown, so has our customer base. We're working with larger, more complex customers global organizations with multiple business units, strict security requirements, and high expectations around reliability and governance.
Your job is to help make that complexity feel simple.
This is a Senior Full Stack role on our Enterprise team. You'll focus on designing and evolving the foundational systems that make CoLab secure, scalable, and enterprise-ready: identity, permissions, tenant boundaries, data modelling, and cross-organization collaboration.Despite being a full stack role with frontend responsibilities you will be fairly backend-weighted.
Our Ideal Candidate
You think in systems.
You care about clean boundaries, tenant isolation, and making "secure by default" the easiest path. You're comfortable debating ...