Seeking a self-directed, user-obsessed, and creative Growth Engineer to join our team!
LatchBio
The convergence of laboratory automation, high-throughput assays, and machine learning is moving the medium of biological discovery to silicon. At LatchBio, we are building AI and data infrastructure to accelerate biopharma R&D.
Present snapshot
- We are 14 engineers in San Francisco solving the data bottleneck in biology.
- Data in biotech has increased 10,000x over the past 10 years.
- AI in biopharma will 20x in 7 years. $200m to $4b, 54% CAGR.
- We build ubiquitous software, storage, pipelines, & machine learning for all of biology.
- 50+ new biotech companies onboarded in the past 12 months. $28M Series A from Lux Capital, Coatue, and General Catalyst.

Growth Engineer
We know what connects with our customers: sharp, credible technical content that earns trust from scientists and makes LatchBio a thought leader in the industry. Your job is to take that core insight and scale it across every medium (blog posts, social, videos, docs, events, and more) and keep iterating as it compounds.
We are looking for someone with a portfolio of impactful technical and scientific writing that connects with people: narratives that explain complex biology and software concepts across audiences.
Who you are:
- Engineering mindset. Run growth experiments. You write, ship, measure, adjust. The goal isn’t to “market;” it’s to make LatchBio the center of conversation in computational biology and AI x Bio. You’ll experiment with every channel that can make that happen.
- Obsession with the biotech industry. Understand how scientists think, what earns their trust, and how to connect product breakthroughs with real technical credibility. Build, connect, measure, repeat until it works.
- Scientifically fluent and precise. You understand biology and bioinformatics deeply enough to communicate complex topics accurately. You can read scientific papers, analyze data workflows, and write about them in a way that builds credibility with researchers and engineers alike.
- Experimental mindset. You treat growth like a scientific process by forming hypotheses, testing channels, measuring results, and refining based on data. You’re driven by iteration and improvement, not polish or perfection.
- Technical versatility. You’re comfortable using engineering and design tools to get work done, from building landing pages and editing videos to writing scripts or updating internal wikis. You learn new tools fast and apply them pragmatically.