DiscoverFeatured Lists10 Hot "No Code" Startups Hiring Now

10 Hot "No Code" Startups Hiring Now

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Caleb Kaiser
Software engineering working in R&D @ Comet.mlView Caleb Kaiser's profile on Wellfound

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Critics like to dismiss "No Code" platforms as being faddish and incapable of producing "real" software, but here's the thing: No Code platforms have been powering the web for decades.

To understand the impact of these platforms, think of it this way. Wordpress, one of the oldest coding-optional website management platforms, is also the most ubiquitous CMS on the web, powering over 25% of the world's websites. Pile on the popularity of Shopify, Wix, Squarespace, and others, and you're looking at a massive chunk of the modern internet being run on No Code or low-code platforms.

The newer generation of these platforms, think Zapier, Airtable, and Webflow, allow you to take things a step further and actually build full-stack web applications without touching a line of code. When it comes to democratizing the power of software, it's hard to think of an industry making more of an impact.

Because of this impact, these companies also are incredibly successful financially. Shopify and Wix are both publicly traded, Squarespace is gearing up for an IPO, Airtable is a unicorn, and Webflow just raised a Series A at a $350 million dollar valuation.

If you want to join a startup that is having a massive impact on the world, and also has a reliable path to profitability, consider applying to one of the No Code startups below:

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Security in the Skies: 5 High Altitude Balloon and Satellite Startups Hiring Now

Nearly nine decades after the Hindenburg disaster, some speculate we’re entering the Second Age of the Balloon. “As all these objects fall, a new space race is rising,” Vox proclaimed. Tens of thousands of balloons float into near-space every year, and the numbers rise every year. The National Weather Service alone launches around 60k high-flying balloons each year. The Pentagon spent nearly $4B over the past two years on its own high altitude balloons, according to Politico (https://www.politico.com/news/2022/07/05/u-s-militarys-newest-weapon-against-china-and-russia-hot-air-00043860). Why the interest in such old-school tech? “They’re cheap, easy to transport, can be fielded in large numbers and are payload agnostic,” industry expert George Howell wrote. Tucson, Arizona-based World View, a stratospheric ballooning company, last month announced plans to go public via SPAC merger. The company develops a “stratollite” that provides high-res imagery for extended periods. (The company also offer space tourism.) Colorado-based Urban Sky (/company/urban-sky) is creating what it claims as the first ever reusable stratospheric balloon. Called “micro-balloons,” they’re the size of a VW bus and can hover in near space to collect data over urban areas. Company founder Jared Leidich has some chops in this arena, having designed the space suit used in the world record space dive in 2014 via a balloon at nearly 136k feet. Near Space Labs (/company/nearspacelabs) invites people to “step inside a new way of thinking about all things geospatial imaging.” The company's high-altitude balloons that carry a small, autonomous robot called Swifty to capture the world around them at 60k to 85k feet in the air. The company says it’s done zero carbon emissions and recently launched a program to make its high-resolution Earth imagery available to universities and nonprofits for free. Sounds fascinating, right? Luckily, with a new wave of space technology, comes a brand new, cutting-edge wave of jobs. Check out 5 top startups aiming skywards and hiring now.

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