Trashlab - Designer Engineer
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80 ptsDesign Engineer - TrashLab
Join Trashlab — the operating system for waste haulers.
We unify dispatch, billing, calls and routes into one powerful platform that transforms how waste fleets operate.
By combining real‑time vehicle tracking, route optimization, integrated billing, and customer communications, Trashlab helps haulers cut costs, speed up collections, and deliver exceptional service. If you’re passionate about building scalable software that drives operational efficiency and sustainability in the waste industry, come help us build the future of waste operations.
What you'll do
Turn messy operations into intuitive interfaces
Work across dispatch views, billing flows, route management, and driver communications — taking real operational pain points and designing them into software that haulers actually want to use.
Design and implement, end to end
You'll own experiences from concept to production. Wireframes, high-fidelity mockups, and shipping the code yourself in React and React Native. No long handoff cycles.
Build and maintain our design system
Create the components, tokens, and patterns that make Trashlab feel consistent across web and mobile. You'll set the bar for visual and interaction quality.
Stay close to users
Talk to haulers directly. Understand how they actually work — what slows them down, what they expect a button to do — and bring that back into the product.
What we're looking for
You design and ship code
Strong product and UX judgment
You can look at a workflow and spot what's confusing before anyone tells you. You make decisions grounded in how real people use software, not in aesthetic preference.
Experience with dense, data-heavy UI
Dispatch dashboards, billing tables, route maps — this isn't a consumer app with four buttons. You've worked on software where information density matters and know how to handle it.
Ownership and comfort with ambiguity
IA multi-agent expert
Interview Process
Silver Screening interview
Take home challenge
Client resume review + take home review
Client technical interview
About Design
The Design field, especially UX/UI and Product Design, has experienced significant growth in recent years. With accelerated business digitization, the demand for professionals who can create intuitive and pleasant digital experiences has never been higher.
Key skills include Figma, Sketch, Adobe XD, user research, design thinking, prototyping, and system design. Product designers are increasingly valued for their direct impact on business results.
Remote work has opened doors for Brazilian designers to work for global companies, with competitive salaries in dollars and euros.
Discover Other Areas
Understand the scope of work, key skills, and tools used in different career areas.
About Project Manager
The Project Manager is the professional responsible for planning, executing, and controlling projects end-to-end, ensuring they are delivered on time, within budget, and with the expected quality. With the growing complexity of businesses, project management professionals are fundamental to organizational success.
Key skills include planning and scheduling, scope, cost, risk, quality, and resource management, stakeholder communication, cross-functional team leadership, and use of agile and traditional methodologies. Certifications like PMP, PRINCE2, and Six Sigma are important differentiators.
Project Managers in technology companies are highly valued, especially those who master agile methodologies (Scrum, Kanban), tools like Jira and MS Project, and can deliver complex projects efficiently. The field offers opportunities from project analyst to head of PMO, with a focus on execution, governance, and business value.
About Business Analysis
The Business Analyst (BA) is the professional responsible for identifying problems, opportunities, and solutions in organizational processes, acting as a bridge between business areas and the technology development team. They gather and specify requirements, map value streams, design future processes, and help ensure that software deliveries align with the company's strategic goals.
About Content Manager
The Content Manager is the professional responsible for leading the entire content strategy, production, and management of an organization. They define the editorial strategy, coordinate writing teams, and ensure content aligns with business goals and brand identity.
Key skills include content strategy, editorial planning, content audit, buyer persona, customer journey, content ops, content governance, performance metrics (ROI, engagement, organic traffic), and team management. Knowledge of WordPress, Contentful, Notion, and analytics tools is a differentiator.
Content Managers in technology companies are highly valued, especially those who can align content with conversion funnels, lead multidisciplinary teams, and use data to optimize editorial strategy. The field offers opportunities from content manager to head of content, with a focus on strategy, quality, and scale.
About Ecommerce Manager
The Ecommerce Manager is the professional responsible for the entire strategic and operational management of online stores and marketplaces. They lead teams, define pricing, promotion, and catalog strategies, and monitor online sales performance across multiple platforms.
Key skills include catalog management, dynamic pricing, seasonal campaigns (Black Friday, Cyber Monday), marketplace management (Amazon, Mercado Livre, Shopee, Magalu), paid traffic, CRO, and team management. Knowledge of Shopify, VTEX, WooCommerce, Google Ads, Meta Ads, and performance metrics is a differentiator.
Ecommerce Managers in technology companies are highly valued, especially those who master multi-marketplace management, checkout optimization, and mobile commerce strategies. The field offers opportunities from ecommerce manager to head of ecommerce, with a focus on revenue, customer experience, and growth.
About Web Designer
The Web Designer is the professional responsible for creating visual interfaces for websites, web applications, and landing pages, combining aesthetics, usability, and user experience. They transform business needs into functional and responsive layouts that communicate brand identity.
Key skills include UI design, responsive design, prototyping (Figma, Sketch, Adobe XD), wireframing, design systems, accessibility (WCAG), information architecture, and basic HTML/CSS knowledge. Knowledge of UX design, motion design, and front-end is a differentiator.
Web Designers in technology companies are highly valued, especially those who master design systems, design tokens, and can create interfaces that convert and engage. The field offers opportunities from junior web designer to product designer and design lead.