Legal Engineer (Litigation/Regulatory)
harvey
Job Score
80 ptsWhy Harvey
At Harvey, we’re transforming how legal and professional services operate. By combining frontier agentic AI, an enterprise-grade platform, and deep domain expertise, we’re reshaping how critical knowledge work gets done for decades to come.
This is a rare chance to help build a generational company at a true inflection point. With 1500+ customers in 60+ countries, strong product-market fit, and world-class investor support, we’re scaling fast and defining a new category in real time. The work is ambitious, the bar is high, and the opportunity for growth — personal, professional, and financial — is unmatched.
Our team moves fast, takes ownership, and is deeply committed to the mission — operating with intensity, staying close to our customers, and pushing each other for excellence. We live by three values: Decisiveness, Simplicity, and Job's Not Finished. We act quickly on clear judgment over perfect information, we believe simplicity is what scales, and we're never satisfied with where we are. If you want to do the best work of your career alongside people who share that drive, we'd love to build with you.
At Harvey, the future of professional services is being written today — and we’re just getting started.
Role Overview
Harvey’s Legal Engineers are former practicing lawyers who bridge customers, sales, and product to support all aspects of our sales strategy and product development. As trusted advisors to the lawyers they work with, they lead sharp discovery and tailored product demonstrations, translating real legal work into Harvey solutions that provide clear value for lawyers.
This Litigation & Regulatory-focused Legal Engineer role is designed for attorneys with litigation experience in disputes, investigations, regulatory, enforcement, or compliance-related practices who are excited about the future of AI in legal services. As strategic partners to legal teams, Legal Engineers thrive in ambiguity and help lawyers do higher-quality work faster and with more confidence using Harvey.
What You'll Do
Work directly with litigation and regulatory lawyers at current and prospective customers to uncover workflow pain points, recommend solutions, and demonstrate how Harvey fits into real legal work.
Serve as the voice of the customer, translating feedback and legal workflow insights from litigators and regulatory practitioners into concrete, lawyer-ready product direction.
Partner closely with product, engineering, sales, and marketing teams to shape Harvey’s roadmap and ensure the product evolves in ways legal teams trust and adopt.
Build and refine product demonstrations, workflows, and use cases that reflect how litigation and regulatory teams actually work, including how AI is transforming those workflows.
Introduce new capabilities in a way that is tailored, credible, and compelling for each customer, continuously raising the bar for how Harvey is deployed across litigation and regulatory practices.
What You Have
You move confidently through uncertainty, you operate at speed, and ship solutions that work—iterating quickly with lawyers, sales teams, and product partners to help Harvey and its customers win. You bring deep curiosity about AI's potential to transform legal work, a bias toward action, and the creativity to solve problems nobody's cracked yet.
JD or equivalent legal qualification.
At least 3 years of experience in a litigation or regulatory practice such as complex commercial litigation, government or internal investigations, antitrust and competition regulation, intellectual property litigation, or other regulatory, compliance, enforcement, or related practice areas at a top-tier law firm, government agency, or sophisticated in-house legal team.
Strong understanding of the workflows, challenges, and demands faced by litigators and regulatory lawyers.
Executive presence and relationship-building skills, with the ability to establish credibility with legal professionals at all levels.
Outstanding communication and presentation skills, whether leading a live product demo, facilitating a workshop, or engaging in strategic customer conversations.
Curiosity about AI and its potential to transform legal practice.
A practical, solutions-oriented mindset and enthusiasm for working directly with customers.
Experience in client-facing roles, law firm business development, investigations management, or cross-functional collaboration is a plus.
Compensation
$270,000 - $320,000 USD OTE 70/30 split
Depending on your location, an Applicant Privacy Notice may apply to you. You can find all of our Applicant Privacy Notices [here].
#LI-LS1
Harvey is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity/expression, national origin, disability, age, genetic information, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law.
We are committed to providing reasonable accommodations to applicants with disabilities, and requests can be made by emailing accommodations@harvey.ai
Discover Other Areas
Understand the scope of work, key skills, and tools used in different career areas.
About QA and Testing
QA and Software Testing are fundamental to ensure the quality and reliability of applications. QA professionals ensure that the delivered product meets requirements and is free of critical defects.
Key skills include manual and automated testing, Selenium, Cypress, Playwright, Postman, JMeter, and CI/CD pipeline knowledge. Performance and security testing are differentiators.
With the adoption of DevOps and continuous deployment, the demand for automation QAs and SDETs continues to grow.
About Marketing
The Marketing area is strategic for the growth and positioning of any company. It encompasses traditional marketing, brand management, market research, trade marketing, product marketing, and market intelligence. Marketing professionals are responsible for planning and executing strategies that connect brands to their target audience.
Key skills include brand management, market research, competitive analysis, product marketing, trade marketing, pricing, relationship marketing, and channel development. Knowledge of research tools (Nielsen, Kantar, Ipsos), BI, and advanced spreadsheets is a differentiator.
Marketing professionals in technology companies are highly valued, especially those who master product marketing, go-to-market strategy, and data-driven marketing. The field offers opportunities from analyst to CMO, with a focus on growth, brand positioning, and return on investment.
About Blockchain
The Blockchain area involves the development and implementation of secure and distributed transaction ledgers. Professionals in this field work with smart contract development, cryptography, consensus algorithms, and platforms such as Ethereum, Hyperledger, and Solana, ensuring security and decentralization for various types of applications.
About Branding
Branding is the area responsible for building, managing, and strengthening a brand's identity and market value. Branding professionals create strategies that define how the brand is perceived by the public, from the logo to the complete customer experience.
Key skills include brand strategy, visual identity, brand guidelines, positioning, naming, brand voice, market research, brand equity, and brand management. Knowledge of graphic design (Figma, Illustrator, Photoshop), storytelling, and brand experience is a differentiator.
Branding professionals in technology companies are highly valued, especially those who master employer branding, digital branding, and can build strong, memorable brands in competitive markets. The field offers opportunities from brand designer to head of brand, with a focus on identity, differentiation, and perceived value.
About Frontend
The Frontend area is responsible for creating the visual interfaces that users interact with on websites and web applications. Frontend professionals combine technical skills with design to deliver intuitive, responsive, and accessible digital experiences.
Key skills include HTML, CSS, JavaScript/TypeScript, frameworks like React, Angular, and Vue, build tools (Webpack, Vite), CSS (Tailwind, Sass), testing (Jest, Cypress), and knowledge of web performance and accessibility (WCAG). Familiarity with design systems and reusable components is a differentiator.
Frontend developers in technology companies are highly valued, especially those who master React, Next.js, web performance, and accessibility. The field offers opportunities from junior developer to frontend architect, with a focus on user experience, performance, and code quality.