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The mission of The New York Times is to seek the truth and help people understand the world. That means independent journalism is at the heart of all we do as a company. It’s why we have a world-renowned newsroom that sends journalists to report on the ground from nearly 160 countries. It’s why we focus deeply on how our readers will experience our journalism, from print to audio to a world-class digital and app destination. And it’s why our business strategy centers on making journalism so good that it’s worth paying for.Mission Overview & Responsibilities:The Subscriber Experience teams at The New York Times are focused on guiding subscribers to discover and adopt all that The Times has to offer—from the centrality of our news report to our full product bundle—by building meaningful pathways and experiences that create exploration, habituation, and engagement. We are looking for an experienced UX/UI Engineer with experience with design and technology to help shape the future of The New York Times app experience.This is an individual contributor role reporting to the VP of Product Design for Subscriber Experience. This is a remote-friendly position based in our New York City office.As a Staff UX/UI Engineer, you will be a force multiplier, driving higher quality outcomes from your colleagues. You’ll collaborate with diverse teams to identify opportunities for enhancing our product experience, designing solutions that align with user needs, team goals, and our newsroom strategy.We value an environment of learning and collaboration. You'll lend your skills and expertise to grow and support more junior design team members, promote a rich prototyping culture, and attend regular design rituals where you'll receive and provide critiques, and identify opportunities for consistency across the function.Responsibilities:• Develop working prototypes to explore new features, content strategies, and interaction models, ensuring the right questions are addressed and distinct user needs are met.• Facilitate decision-making and discussions by creating tangible artifacts that bring UX solutions to life, focusing on interaction and motion.• Partner with designers and researchers to uncover user challenges and use these insights to inform your UX decisions.• Ensure a seamless connection between design and engineering by maintaining design/UX visions through code, applying technical architecture and data to create realistic user and journalistic scenarios in prototypes.• Contribute to the continuous improvement of design standards, guidelines, and reusable components.• Participate in design rituals and the hiring process for design roles within the product design team.• Promote a culture of innovation by inspiring and mentoring teammates, enhancing processes, and improving documentation through prototyping activities.Basic Qualifications:• 7+ years of experience as a design technologist, engineer, or UX designer with recent experience focused on native app UX• Experience with modern iOS (SwiftUI) or Android (Jetpack Compose) user interface frameworks• A portfolio of work that shows understanding user-centered design principles and showcases your design process• Experience working with data and qualitative research teams to inform product and UX decisions• Experience gaining agreement through use of design or prototyping artifactsPreferred Qualifications:• Experience breaking down big challenges into smaller decisions framed as trade-offs (e.g. time vs. scope)• Experience guiding impactful product brainstorming and leading discussions• Experience designing native products centered around user behavior and nuances that encourage positive engagement• Basic awareness of accessibility principles with a commitment to further learningREQ-016740LI-RemoteThe annual base pay range for this role is between:$160,000—$180,000 USDThe New York Times is committed to a diverse and inclusive workforce, one that reflects the varied global community we serve. Our journalism and the products we build in the service of that journalism greatly benefit from a range of perspectives, which can only come from diversity of all types, across our ranks, at all levels of the organization. Achieving true diversity and inclusion is the right thing to do. It is also the smart thing for our business. So we strongly encourage women, veterans, people with disabilities, people of color and gender nonconforming candidates to apply.The New York Times Company is an Equal Opportunity Employer and does not discriminate on the basis of an individual's sex, age, race, color, creed, national origin, alienage, religion, marital status, pregnancy, sexual orientation or affectional preference, gender identity and expression, disability, genetic trait or predisposition, carrier status, citizenship, veteran or military status and other personal characteristics protected by law. All applications will receive consideration for employment without regard to legally protected characteristics. The New York Times Company will provide reasonable accommodations as required by applicable federal, state, and/or local laws. Individuals seeking an accommodation for the application or interview process should email reasonable.accommodations@nytimes.com. Emails sent for unrelated issues, such as following up on an application, will not receive a response.The Company will further consider qualified applicants, including those with criminal histories, in a manner consistent with the requirements of applicable "Fair Chance" laws.The New York Times Company follows the pay transparency and non-discrimination provisions outlined by the United States Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs. Click here for details.For information about The New York Times' privacy practices for job applicants click here.Please beware of fraudulent job postings. Scammers may post fraudulent job opportunities, and they may even make fraudulent employment offers. This is done by bad actors to collect personal information and money from victims. All legitimate job opportunities from The New York Times will be accessible through The New York Times careers site. The New York Times will not ask job applicants for financial information or for payment, and will not refer you to a third party to do so. You should never send money to anyone who suggests they can provide employment with The New York Times.If you see a fake or fraudulent job posting, or if you suspect you have received a fraudulent offer, you can report it to The New York Times at security@nytimes.com. You can also file a report with the Federal Trade Commission or your state attorney general.