reed.co.uk is looking for the world’s best (or future best) developers to help the world Love Mondays.
You will be joining a Scrum team responsible for helping our 4 million monthly visitors apply to over 230,000 jobs a day. Rewarding? Meaningful? You bet - we change people’s lives and develop their careers.
We’re already the UK’s number one job site, enjoying a bigger market share than any other employment or training site (source: Experian Hitwise), and we need world class individuals to help us realise our ambitious plans for growth. We’re passionate about our users, our product and our brand, and we want to meet highly motivated developers who share our vision and our passion.
The role is for a Developer who will be involved in the full development lifecycle, from design through to implementation, and is an ideal opportunity to learn and use a wide range of cutting-edge technologies.
You will be joining one of several cross-disciplinary teams, observing the agile Scrum methodology and working closely with other developers, DBAs, front end (HTML/CSS) experts, Scrum Masters, product owners and, just occasionally, with
marketing.
Our offices are based near Holborn and Covent garden in one of London’s most exciting districts, surrounded by some of the capital’s best coffee shops, cafes, restaurants and bars as well as several great gyms and outdoor spaces.
You will have exposure to some of the latest tech available on the Microsoft .NET platform including, C# 5, .NET 4.5, MVC 5.1, Web Api 2 plus some great open source software such as Lucene.NET, Redis, MiniProfiler, nHibernate, Dapper and Castle Windsor.
You'll have access to some great tooling support including Visual Studio 2013, Resharper 8.2, DotTrace, LinqPad, NHProf. You’ll also use a nice, fast, shiny (gaming) PC with plenty of RAM, SSD and a decent GPU with a multi-monitor setup.
This is not the right job for you if...
- You just want a detailed spec handed to you so you can sit in the corner by yourself
- You don't like trying to solve complex problems
- You don't see the point of testing or writing automated tests
- You don't like arguing with DBAs over LINQ vs stored procedures