What We're Looking for
We're looking for a Mobile Software Development Engineer in Test (SDET) to help us deliver sleep therapy in a mobile virtual pet game. This is a hands-on role requiring a thorough understanding of the quality assurance test development processes, and will play a key role in our production process. We need engineers who are versatile, curious, and excited to make wellness accessible for everyone!
Responsibilities
- Work closely with cross-functional teams to find defects, report bugs, and debugging during each sprint cycle to ensure that our products work correctly
- Own functional testing, regression testing, UI testing, and unit testing
- Build, maintain and improve test frameworks, and help set up automation infrastructure
- Develop and implement standard methodologies for automation, continuous build/deployment, automated testing, and performance testing
- Own application quality, define and automate test cases and evaluation criteria for testability and quality, report and verify defects
- Assist with production deployment support and post release while ensuring all testing results are easily accessible and understandable
Qualifications
- Minimum of 3 years of solid software testing practices, methodologies and techniques
- Programming experience (Dart or Javascript preferred)
- Experience testing mobile apps with an understanding of how mobile apps work, e.g., difference between foreground and background states of a mobile app, configuring phone settings to simulate failure conditions such as loss of internet connection, etc
- Experience testing with software debug log files, e.g., experience understanding an application’s debug log files to interpret errors
- Experience with Selenium or Appium
- Experience with JSON files with the ability to interpret the data in the file
- Exceptional communication and reporting skills
- Ability to work in high-pressure, deadline driven environment
About Us
Because poor sleep has widespread and profound negative effects to both mental and physical health, it often results in misdiagnosis and unnecessary treatments.