2025 June 17
Evolving the preprint evaluation world with Sciety
This post is based on an interview with Sciety team at eLife.
You will play a key role in the software development team, being the technical lead for the front-end components of a number of services that are critical to thousands of publishers in the global scholarly community. You will design and build infrastructure that serves our newer smaller members as well as large high-volume publishers.
You will contribute to our JavaScript and Java codebases, building new functionality using Vue.js and maintaining our React.js codebase.
As a technical lead on our front-end you will collaborate with the Product and Infrastructure teams to specify, design and implement our new features and services as part of our full stack. You will have a key voice in discussions about technical approaches to front-end architecture and how they relate to our back-end, infrastructure and operational considerations. You will always keep an eye on software quality and ensure that the code you and your colleagues produce is maintainable, well tested and of high standard.
We don’t expect a successful candidate to tick all of these boxes right away!
You can find more about our latest plans from our recent LIVE Annual event: https://doi-org.pluma.sjfc.edu/10.13003/5gq8v1q.
This position is full time and, as for all Crossref employees, location is flexible - you can work remotely with a 2 to 3-hour overlap with UTC-0. We provide a competitive benefits package.
Our colleagues are spread across Europe and North America. The software development team can be found in the US east-coast, the UK, Ireland and France.
We build and maintain services for the Crossref community. Our DOI registration, metadata pipeline, reference matching, search and querying play a part in the operations of 15,000 members, who have registered the metadata for over 100 million content items. Our systems have evolved over our 20 year history, and we’re continuing to proactively update them. New code and services are written in modern Java, Clojure and JavaScript and run in AWS, making use of Kafka and Elastic Search.
Issue tracking and all new code is open source. We strongly believe in open scholarly infrastructure and openness at all stages of the software development lifecycle. As a membership organization we keep closely in touch with our users, and encourage our developers to be familiar with our community. The Development, Product and Infrastructure teams are tightly knit and we work in 2 week sprints.
Crossref makes research objects easy to find, cite, link, assess, and reuse. We’re a not-for-profit membership organization that exists to make scholarly communications better. We rally the community; tag and share metadata; run an open infrastructure; play with technology; and make tools and services—all to help put research in context. It’s as simple—and as complicated—as that.
Since January 2000 we have grown from strength to strength and now have over 12,000 members across 120 countries and thousands of tools and services relying on our metadata.
Crossref is committed to a policy of non-discrimination and equal opportunity for all employees and qualified applicants for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, pregnancy or a condition related to pregnancy, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, national origin, ancestry, age, physical or mental disability, genetic information, veteran status, uniform service member status, or any other protected class under applicable law. Crossref will make reasonable accommodations for qualified individuals with known disabilities, in accordance with applicable law.