
I’m hiring a Mobile Developer 📱who loves to write.
I’m hiring a Mobile Developer 📱who loves to write.
I’m hiring a Mobile Developer 📱who loves to write.
Hey, I’m James, one of the founders of Sudowrite.
And I’m angry that writing on mobile sucks.
We have literal supercomputers in our pockets, but mobile writing interfaces haven't improved in years (I'm looking at you, Apple and Google).
Improving how we write and edit on a phone is an important problem. As a parent, I have fewer uninterrupted blocks of time at a desk. Many times, the best ideas come when I'm out in the world.
Writers are begging for better mobile tools.
We launched our mobile app last year. Now over 20% of our users are active on phones. Some of our users are writing the entire first draft of their book with their thumbs.
But we’re far from solving this problem. We see a world where writing on a phone doesn’t feel like a compromise. It just feels like writing.
Do you love building new interfaces that make hard things easy? Do you know the joy (and pains) of creating a text editor from scratch? If so, let's chat. 🛟
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.
Digging for root causes
Ginni at Author Nation
At our Tulum retreat
Our team, on Zoom. yay.

Digging for root causes

Ginni at Author Nation

Our team on Zoom. yay.

At our Tulum retreat
(This is our team. We are nice.)
First, you should know that what we’re setting out to build is hard, but important. We’ll hit many dead ends, and we’ll end up throwing away a lot of prototypes in service of creating something good.
But I wouldn’t be doing this if it were easy.
Second, you need to know our company is weird, for a lot of reasons.
First, you should know that what we’re setting out to build is hard, but important. We’ll hit many dead ends, and we’ll end up throwing away a lot of prototypes in service of creating something good.
But I wouldn’t be doing this if it were easy.
Second, you need to know our company is weird, for a lot of reasons.
First, you should know that what we’re setting out to build is hard, but important. We’ll hit many dead ends, and we’ll end up throwing away a lot of prototypes in service of creating something good.
But I wouldn’t be doing this if it were easy.
Second, you need to know our company is weird, for a lot of reasons.
We talk about our 👺 fears.
We talk about our 👺 fears.
We talk about our 👺 fears.
We’re not trying to raise massive rounds of VC.
We’re not trying to raise massive rounds of VC.
We’re not trying to raise massive rounds of VC.
We make creative tools for artists, not B2B SaaS.
We make creative tools for artists, not B2B SaaS.
We make creative tools for artists, not B2B SaaS.
We share our 🌈 feelings, and our profits, too.
We share our 🌈 feelings, and our profits, too.
We share our 🌈 feelings, and our profits, too.
Still here? Let’s get into it.
Skip around, if you like:
Still here? Let’s get into it.
Skip around, if you like:
Still here? Let’s get into it.
Skip around, if you like:
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
What even is Sudowrite and why should you care?
What even is Sudowrite and why should you care?
What even is Sudowrite and why should you care?



Watch this! ☝️
We’re nice people making AI tools for novelists.
We do this because we love storytelling and we’re optimists. We believe AI is a phenomenal collaborator, not a destroyer of worlds.
As writers living in the most interesting time for writers in history, we have an opportunity to reinvent how people write.
We feel honored that we get to do this work.
Watch this! ☝️
We’re nice people making AI tools for novelists.
We do this because we love storytelling and we’re optimists. We believe AI is a phenomenal collaborator, not a destroyer of worlds.
As writers living in the most interesting time for writers in history, we have an opportunity to reinvent how people write.
We feel honored that we get to do this work.
Watch this! ☝️
We’re nice people making AI tools for novelists.
We do this because we love storytelling and we’re optimists. We believe AI is a phenomenal collaborator, not a destroyer of worlds.
As writers living in the most interesting time for writers in history, we have an opportunity to reinvent how people write.
We feel honored that we get to do this work.
30,000+ paying writers love and use us.
30,000+ paying writers love and use us.
30,000+ paying writers love and use us.
20,000,000,000+ words written. That’s a lot of novels.
20,000,000,000+ words written. That’s a lot of novels.
20,000,000,000+ words written. That’s a lot of novels.
3,000,000+ projects in every genre imaginable.
3,000,000+ projects in every genre imaginable.
3,000,000+ projects in every genre imaginable.
9 full-time staff and 10 contractors. Small is beautiful.
9 full-time staff and 10 contractors. Small is beautiful.
9 full-time staff and 10 contractors. Small is beautiful.
3+ years of profitability. We’re building to last.
3+ years of profitability. We’re building to last.
3+ years of profitability. We’re building to last.
0 VCs on the board telling us what to do.
0 VCs on the board telling us what to do.
0 VCs on the board telling us what to do.
Chapter 2
The Actual Job Listing
The Actual Job Listing
I’m looking for a Senior Mobile Engineer to own our mobile app.
This is a real ownership role.
You won’t just be implementing designs handed to you by committee. You’ll be helping shape the product and the future of mobile at Sudowrite.
Our mobile app is built in React Native via Expo for iOS and Android.
But this is not a basic app.
It has a custom document editing system built around a TipTap editor running inside a WebView, with a lightweight bridge between the native app and the editor.
It uses Y.js for collaboration, and it has multiple persistence and sync layers. There’s also Smart Dictation built with native Swift bindings, with intricate audio and transcription features. Oh, and lots of AI text streaming features, too.
I’m looking for a Senior Mobile Engineer to own our mobile app.
This is a real ownership role.
You won’t just be implementing designs handed to you by committee. You’ll be helping shape the product and the future of mobile at Sudowrite.
Our mobile app is built in React Native via Expo for iOS and Android.
But this is not a basic app.
It has a custom document editing system built around a TipTap editor running inside a WebView, with a lightweight bridge between the native app and the editor.
It uses Y.js for collaboration, and it has multiple persistence and sync layers. There’s also Smart Dictation built with native Swift bindings, with intricate audio and transcription features. Oh, and lots of AI text streaming features, too.
Some days will look like this…
Some days will look like this…
Some days will look like this…
Improving performance to make the app feel smoother
Improving performance to make the app feel smoother
Improving performance to make the app feel smoother
Debugging an issue in the React Native ↔ TipTap bridge
Debugging an issue in the React Native ↔ TipTap bridge
Debugging an issue in the React Native ↔ TipTap bridge
Designing safer sync behavior for offline edits and reconnection
Designing safer sync behavior for offline edits and reconnection
Designing safer sync behavior for offline edits and reconnection
Fixing a platform-specific annoyance on iOS
Fixing a platform-specific annoyance on iOS
Fixing a platform-specific annoyance on iOS
Other days will look like this…
Other days will look like this…
Other days will look like this…
Dogfooding the app to write your own stories
Dogfooding the app to write your own stories
Dogfooding the app to write your own stories
Chatting with writers to discover their biggest pain points
Chatting with writers to discover their biggest pain points
Chatting with writers to discover their biggest pain points
Giving a demo to a beta group of users
Giving a demo to a beta group of users
Giving a demo to a beta group of users
Researching other mobile writing interfaces
What Success Looks Like
What Success Looks Like
What Success Looks Like
Week 1 - Y0u’ve learned the basics about the app and shipped your first PR.
Month 1 - You’ve shipped features, fixed bugs, and have mastered the architecture of the app, making it better than when you found it.
Month 3 - You independently own projects, come up with new ideas to make Sudowrite the best writing app on the planet, and implement them beginning-to-end.
Week 1 - Y0u’ve learned the basics about the app and shipped your first PR.
Month 1 - You’ve shipped features, fixed bugs, and have mastered the architecture of the app, making it better than when you found it.
Month 3 - You independently own projects, come up with new ideas to make Sudowrite the best writing app on the planet, and implement them beginning-to-end.
About You
About You
About You
You’ve had 5+ years experience shipping mobile products. You’re deeply comfortable in React Native, but also familiar with iOS and Android.
You’ve had 5+ years experience shipping mobile products. You’re deeply comfortable in React Native, but also familiar with iOS and Android.
Ideally you are also a writer of fiction and know the world of novel writing.
Ideally you are also a writer of fiction and know the world of novel writing.
Ideally you are also a writer of fiction and know the world of novel writing.
You use AI tools all the time. You routinely manage 8 coding agents across your codebase, and you know how get them to produce quality code.
You use AI tools all the time. You routinely manage 8 coding agents across your codebase, and you know how get them to produce quality code.
You use AI tools all the time. You routinely manage 8 coding agents across your codebase, and you know how get them to produce quality code.
You know Expo, including the parts people only learn once they’ve suffered a little: native modules, EAS builds, OTA updates, and release workflows.
You know Expo, including the parts people only learn once they’ve suffered a little: native modules, EAS builds, OTA updates, and release workflows.
You know Expo, including the parts people only learn once they’ve suffered a little: native modules, EAS builds, OTA updates, and release workflows.
You have strong product taste. You get annoyed when something feels clunky and overcomplicated.
You have strong product taste. You get annoyed when something feels clunky and overcomplicated.
You have strong product taste. You get annoyed when something feels clunky and overcomplicated.
You can move between code thinking and business thinking. You can say, “This persistence model is going to bite us later,” and “No one is going to use this feature, why are we building it?”
You can move between code thinking and business thinking. You can say, “This persistence model is going to bite us later,” and “No one is going to use this feature, why are we building it?”
You can move between code thinking and business thinking. You can say, “This persistence model is going to bite us later,” and “No one is going to use this feature, why are we building it?”
You love talking to users, and you don't hesitate hopping on Zoom call to do a discovery interview.
You love talking to users, and you don't hesitate hopping on Zoom call to do a discovery interview.
You love talking to users, and you don't hesitate hopping on Zoom call to do a discovery interview.
You can prototype features fast and validate them.
You can prototype features fast and validate them.
You can prototype features fast and validate them.
You’re kind, thoughtful, and you’re fun to be around.
You’re kind, thoughtful, and you’re fun to be around.
You’re kind, thoughtful, and you’re fun to be around.
You are based in the US.
You are based in the US.
You are based in the US.
Comp: $160-180K, depending on experience. Plus profit share and generous equity in a profitable, growing company.
Comp: $160-180K, depending on experience. Plus profit share and generous equity in a profitable, growing company.
Comp: $160-180K, depending on experience. Plus profit share and generous equity in a profitable, growing company.
Our Culture & Perks
Company Retreats
We’ve been to Hawaii (twice), Portland, Palm Springs, Mexico, and more!
We’ve been to Hawaii (twice), Portland, Palm Springs, Mexico, and more!
We’ve been to Hawaii (twice), Portland, Palm Springs, Mexico, and more!
Kind Coworkers
You spend a third of your life at work. It should be with people you like.
You spend a third of your life at work. It should be with people you like.
You spend a third of your life at work. It should be with people you like.
Unlimited Books
Love to read? So do we. The books are on us!
Love to read? So do we. The books are on us!
Love to read? So do we. The books are on us!
Remote-only
For full-time roles, live anywhere within U.S. timezones.
For full-time roles, live anywhere within U.S. timezones.
For full-time roles, live anywhere within U.S. timezones.
Low-drama Culture
We work with a coach to support communication and openness.
We work with a coach to support communication and openness.
We work with a coach to support communication and openness.
Profit Share
We offer competitive compensation and a profit share.
We offer competitive compensation and a profit share.
We offer competitive compensation and a profit share.
Insurance Coverage
We offer full health and dental coverage so you don’t die.
We offer full health and dental coverage so you don’t die.
We offer full health and dental coverage so you don’t die.
401(k)
Because no matter how great this job is, someday you’ll want to retire.
Because no matter how great this job is, someday you’ll want to retire.
Because no matter how great this job is, someday you’ll want to retire.
Generous Equity
Not selling lottery tickets here, but if we win big, we’re in it together.
Not selling lottery tickets here, but if we win big, we’re in it together.
Not selling lottery tickets here, but if we win big, we’re in it together.
Chapter 3
Why you shouldn’t work at Sudowrite
Why you shouldn’t work at Sudowrite
We have a company cult.
It’s called “CLG” and stands for Conscious Leadership Group. It’s all about becoming more conscious in life and work by paying attention to your feelings (b/c they’re there either way, and they’re gonna cause trouble if you ignore them), keeping your commitments, acting with integrity, and so on. Very reasonable, non-culty stuff, packaged in a slightly culty way.
We work with a coach we love and she helps us learn and practice this stuff. We won’t make you do it, but you’ll probably want to.
CLG has helped many of us communicate more clearly, grow closer, and ultimately know ourselves and each other better.
We’re kinda normal, kinda not
In a lot of ways I think Sudowrite is a pretty normal startup. We make software. People pay for it using subscriptions (I know, ew). We are smart and motivated to make good things. We invent new things and take pride in our work. All pretty normal.
And in some ways it’s not a normal startup. Amit and I have started companies before and sold them, and we weren’t looking to start a company. Unlike most startups today, we didn’t do this to take part in an AI gold rush. In fact, we started a couple years before ChatGPT existed.
Amit and I were happily writing fiction and made Sudowrite for ourselves. Then it kinda blew up. Since we’d been through this before, we decided to do things a bit differently.
We raised some money, but not from random VCs. Instead, we carefully brought in founders, writers, directors, and operators. We decided from the start that we wouldn’t chase ever larger and riskier funding rounds, giving up control along the way. It turns out this matters a lot.
This is our fourth year of profitability, and the fourth year we plan to do a profit share. We’ve been featured in The New Yorker and everywhere we care about. We have infinite runway. Our growth has come predominantly from word of mouth. So far, so good.
We want to grow, but not just so we can raise more money and say we’re killing it. We want to grow because it gives us the resources to do cooler and more ambitious things. For example, last year we launched Muse, the first AI model made just for fiction. We’re working on more AI models for writers, and prototyping completely new ways to write.
We have over 30,000 paying authors. At our current revenue, a typical go-for-broke money-losing VC-backed startup might have 40 employees. We’re at a fraction of that.
That means we run things tight and stay focused on the important stuff. It also means everyone has actual impact. Not pretend impact, like share an idea at all-hands and maybe we’ll prioritize it if a VP claims it as their own idea next quarter.
Anyone can come up with an idea on Monday, spec it out the same day, and put it into action a couple days later.
We have a company cult.
It’s called “CLG” and stands for Conscious Leadership Group. It’s all about becoming more conscious in life and work by paying attention to your feelings (b/c they’re there either way, and they’re gonna cause trouble if you ignore them), keeping your commitments, acting with integrity, and so on. Very reasonable, non-culty stuff, packaged in a slightly culty way.
We work with a coach we love and she helps us learn and practice this stuff. We won’t make you do it, but you’ll probably want to.
CLG has helped many of us communicate more clearly, grow closer, and ultimately know ourselves and each other better.
We’re kinda normal, kinda not
In a lot of ways I think Sudowrite is a pretty normal startup. We make software. People pay for it using subscriptions (I know, ew). We are smart and motivated to make good things. We invent new things and take pride in our work. All pretty normal.
And in some ways it’s not a normal startup. Amit and I have started companies before and sold them, and we weren’t looking to start a company. Unlike most startups today, we didn’t do this to take part in an AI gold rush. In fact, we started a couple years before ChatGPT existed.
Amit and I were happily writing fiction and made Sudowrite for ourselves. Then it kinda blew up. Since we’d been through this before, we decided to do things a bit differently.
We raised some money, but not from random VCs. Instead, we carefully brought in founders, writers, directors, and operators. We decided from the start that we wouldn’t chase ever larger and riskier funding rounds, giving up control along the way. It turns out this matters a lot.
This is our fourth year of profitability, and the fourth year we plan to do a profit share. We’ve been featured in The New Yorker and everywhere we care about. We have infinite runway. Our growth has come predominantly from word of mouth. So far, so good.
We want to grow, but not just so we can raise more money and say we’re killing it. We want to grow because it gives us the resources to do cooler and more ambitious things. For example, last year we launched Muse, the first AI model made just for fiction. We’re working on more AI models for writers, and prototyping completely new ways to write.
We have over 30,000 paying authors. At our current revenue, a typical go-for-broke money-losing VC-backed startup might have 40 employees. We’re at a fraction of that.
That means we run things tight and stay focused on the important stuff. It also means everyone has actual impact. Not pretend impact, like share an idea at all-hands and maybe we’ll prioritize it if a VP claims it as their own idea next quarter.
Anyone can come up with an idea on Monday, spec it out the same day, and put it into action a couple days later.
We have a company cult.
It’s called “CLG” and stands for Conscious Leadership Group. It’s all about becoming more conscious in life and work by paying attention to your feelings (b/c they’re there either way, and they’re gonna cause trouble if you ignore them), keeping your commitments, acting with integrity, and so on. Very reasonable, non-culty stuff, packaged in a slightly culty way.
We work with a coach we love and she helps us learn and practice this stuff. We won’t make you do it, but you’ll probably want to.
CLG has helped many of us communicate more clearly, grow closer, and ultimately know ourselves and each other better.
We’re kinda normal, kinda not
In a lot of ways I think Sudowrite is a pretty normal startup. We make software. People pay for it using subscriptions (I know, ew). We are smart and motivated to make good things. We invent new things and take pride in our work. All pretty normal.
And in some ways it’s not a normal startup. Amit and I have started companies before and sold them, and we weren’t looking to start a company. Unlike most startups today, we didn’t do this to take part in an AI gold rush. In fact, we started a couple years before ChatGPT existed.
Amit and I were happily writing fiction and made Sudowrite for ourselves. Then it kinda blew up. Since we’d been through this before, we decided to do things a bit differently.
We raised some money, but not from random VCs. Instead, we carefully brought in founders, writers, directors, and operators. We decided from the start that we wouldn’t chase ever larger and riskier funding rounds, giving up control along the way. It turns out this matters a lot.
This is our fourth year of profitability, and the fourth year we plan to do a profit share. We’ve been featured in The New Yorker and everywhere we care about. We have infinite runway. Our growth has come predominantly from word of mouth. So far, so good.
We want to grow, but not just so we can raise more money and say we’re killing it. We want to grow because it gives us the resources to do cooler and more ambitious things. For example, last year we launched Muse, the first AI model made just for fiction. We’re working on more AI models for writers, and prototyping completely new ways to write.
We have over 30,000 paying authors. At our current revenue, a typical go-for-broke money-losing VC-backed startup might have 40 employees. We’re at a fraction of that.
That means we run things tight and stay focused on the important stuff. It also means everyone has actual impact. Not pretend impact, like share an idea at all-hands and maybe we’ll prioritize it if a VP claims it as their own idea next quarter.
Anyone can come up with an idea on Monday, spec it out the same day, and put it into action a couple days later.
Chapter 4
How to Apply
How to Apply
Write us a note. Tell us why you want to do this and why we should hire you. Let us see your personality. (Tip: Don’t let AI do the writing for you and you’ll stand out from the 90% that do.)
Show us what you can do. Link or attach things. Tell us about the projects you’ve nailed. Send your resume or LinkedIn.
Send it to us. Email mobile-job@sudowrite.com
What happens next…
Write us a note. Tell us why you want to do this and why we should hire you. Let us see your personality. (Tip: Don’t let AI do the writing for you and you’ll stand out from the 90% that do.)
Show us what you can do. Link or attach things. Tell us about the projects you’ve nailed. Send your resume or LinkedIn.
Send it to us. Email mobile-job@sudowrite.com
What happens next…
Write us a note. Tell us why you want to do this and why we should hire you. Let us see your personality. (Tip: Don’t let AI do the writing for you and you’ll stand out from the 90% that do.)
Show us what you can do. Link or attach things. Tell us about the projects you’ve nailed. Send your resume or LinkedIn.
Send it to us. Email mobile-job@sudowrite.com
What happens next…
1.
1.
1.
We’ll follow up to ask questions.
We’ll follow up to ask questions.
We’ll follow up to ask questions.
2.
2.
2.
We’ll reach out to set up a call.
We’ll reach out to set up a call.
We’ll reach out to set up a call.
3.
3.
3.
We’ll offer you a short paid project or go through an exercise together on a call.
We’ll offer you a short paid project or go through an exercise together on a call.
We’ll offer you a short paid project or go through an exercise together on a call.
Thank you for reading this far. Can’t wait to hear from you!
Free Tools
💼 ✋ We’re hiring a Right Hand to our CEO
“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.”
— Maya Angelou
Free Tools
“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.”
— Maya Angelou
Free Tools
💼 ✋ We’re hiring a Right Hand to our CEO
“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.”
— Maya Angelou