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About Us

Airtable is a SaaS company that helps organisations build and run workflows using a platform that combines the flexibility of a spreadsheet with the structure of a database and the usability of modern apps. In practice, it lets teams organise information, connect related data, and create interfaces and automations that support day to day work, without needing to commission bespoke software for every process. The problem it tackles is familiar in many businesses, important operational work often lives in scattered spreadsheets, email threads, and disconnected tools, which makes it hard to keep data accurate, collaborate, and scale processes reliably.

The platform is used by a wide range of teams, including operations, marketing, product, HR, finance, and project delivery groups, as well as more technical users who want a fast way to model data and build internal tools. Airtable tends to suit organisations that need something more structured than a spreadsheet but do not want the overhead of traditional software development for every workflow. It also fits companies that want to standardise how information moves between people and systems, while still giving teams the freedom to adapt their own processes.

Within the SaaS ecosystem, Airtable sits in the space between productivity tools and application platforms. It overlaps with spreadsheets and project tracking tools, but it also competes in the broader category of low code and no code platforms that enable teams to create lightweight applications on top of shared data. That positioning means the product has to balance power and simplicity, serving both non technical builders and technical stakeholders who care about data integrity, permissions, integrations, and governance.

For job seekers, Airtable is likely to be a good fit if you enjoy working on products that sit at the intersection of user experience and complex underlying systems. Product management, design, and user research roles will often involve understanding how different industries and functions work, then translating that into flexible, intuitive building blocks. Engineering roles may span areas such as data modelling, performance, reliability, security, and integrations, as well as front end work focused on making advanced capabilities approachable. Go to market, customer support, and solutions roles tend to suit people who can communicate clearly with a mix of stakeholders, from individual team leads to larger organisations with more formal processes.

What may appeal about working at Airtable is the breadth of real world use cases and the direct impact of improving how teams run their work. Because the product is used across many functions, you are likely to collaborate with colleagues who think in different ways and to learn how organisations actually operate. The environment is also likely to reward people who are comfortable with ambiguity, who can iterate based on customer feedback, and who care about building software that is both powerful and understandable, especially when the goal is to enable others to create their own tools rather than delivering a single fixed workflow.