Engineering Manager
Adobe · New York City, NY · Design
About this role
Adobe is hiring a manager-level Engineering Manager in the software engineering function based in New York City, NY. The posting calls out experience with Express, Agile, Performance Optimization. Compensation is listed at $147,900–$293,250 per year.
- Role
- Engineering Manager
- Function
- software engineering
- Level
- manager
- Track
- hybrid
- Employment
- Full-time
- Location
- New York City, NY
- Department
- Design
- Posted
- May 10, 2026
More roles at Adobe
Job description
from Adobe careersThe Opportunity
Adobe is on a mission to empower creativity and efficiency for millions of users worldwide. We're looking for a dedicated Engineering Manager to lead our ambitious developer platform team. This outstanding opportunity allows you to build the future of innovative software that impacts countless creative professionals. As an Engineering Manager at Adobe, you'll have the chance to play a crucial role in determining our vision and delivering world-class solutions!
What you'll Do
- Lead the developer platform team of engineers—guide and support, offer technical mentorship, remove obstacles—basically make them happy and productive human beings
- Work closely with partners across the organization to build a meaningful vision and team roadmap
- Hire, grow, educate, and retain a successful team with a high delivery cadence in an agile environment
- Encourage engineering excellence with a focus on creativity, performance, scalability, privacy, and security
What you need to succeed
- 5+ years of overall technical experience, including deep knowledge of architecture
- People management experience with a track record of unlocking the potential of your team
- Experience with the creation, development and maintenance of developer ecosystems
- Enjoy building and shipping rapidly while keeping an eye on the latest development and tooling trends
- Knowledge of common services build and operational considerations—how they scale, how they should fit together, and how they’re likely to break