Job Description
Papaya Global is a rapidly growing, award-winning B2B tech unicorn with an ambitious mission to revolutionize the payroll & payments industry. With over $400M raised from multiple tier-one investors, our innovative technology provides a comprehensive solution for managing global workforces, encompassing everything from hiring and onboarding to managing and paying employees in over 160 countries.
We are seeking a Product Manager Lead who will be responsible for leading a team of product managers, product planning, delivery, and marketing throughout the product lifecycle.
You will:
- Maximize clarity by bringing a data-driven mindset to setting goals and milestones
- Conceptualize and analyze different parts of our infrastructure and how they interrelate
- Inspire the company by creating bold, game-changing ideas and delivering them across a set of customer problems
- Elicit non-obvious customer needs, synthesizes research to gain a deep understanding and narrow definition of a problem
- Co-create with teammates to deliver high-quality results. Speak and write with clarity. Comfortable getting into deep technical discussions with engineers about the pros and cons of different approaches.
Requirements:
- 7+ years of experience as Product Manager or Technical Product Manager at world-class SaaS companies that have seen significant growth and are known for best-in-class product.
- 2+ years experience leading product management teams.
- Product experience in building and launching highly scalable and reliable services is a plus.
- A high bar across the board – from your own contributions to the people you work with to the products you work on.
- A personality that encourages action, great collaboration and excellent simplification for communication.
- You never hesitate to roll up your sleeves and address something hands-on.
- Customer-centricity – you have many examples from your past of tough product issues that you persevered through to ensure customer satisfaction
- BA/BS in Computer Science or related field. Technical understanding must go from the highest abstractions down to the hardware