TrueCommerce is a high-performing global supply chain network that provides fully integrated, end-to-end supply chain visibility and management. They are seeking a talented Senior Full-Stack Software Engineer to help build the Unified Platform at the core of their next generation of supply chain solutions, working across various technologies to create modern UIs and backend services.
Responsibilities:
- Design and build API-first backend services in .NET 6–8, aligned to the canonical data model
- Build and maintain modern UIs in React and/or Angular, consuming shared platform APIs
- Integrate with external systems via REST, EDI, and iPaaS/orchestration layers (e.g., Azure Logic Apps, MuleSoft, or equivalent)
- Implement and consume agentic features using LLM APIs (Anthropic Claude, OpenAI) and MCP (Model Context Protocol)
- Write and maintain CI/CD pipelines on Azure DevOps; manage deployments with feature flags for safe releases
- Participate in on-call rotation for BAU support on the live TC.Net platform
- Conduct thorough code reviews and uphold quality bar across the team
- Contribute to architecture decisions and technical documentation
Requirements:
- 5+ years of full-stack engineering experience in production environments
- .NET / C# backend development — REST API design, SQL Server, async patterns
- Frontend experience in React and/or Angular — TypeScript, component architecture, state management
- Cloud platform experience — Azure (App Service, Service Bus, Key Vault, DevOps)
- Integration platform experience — REST APIs, webhooks, message queues, and at least one iPaaS tool
- Agentic / AI coding experience — has built features using LLM APIs, tool use/function calling, or MCP
- Experience with feature flags, trunk-based development, and zero-downtime deployment patterns
- supply chain, EDI (X12/EDIFACT), or B2B integration domain knowledge
- experience with Snowflake, dbt, or analytics data pipelines
- familiarity with identity and auth patterns — OAuth 2.0, OIDC, Microsoft Entra ID
- prior work on platform consolidation or strangler-fig migrations