About Us
Altium builds software used to design and deliver electronic hardware, particularly printed circuit boards. Its products aim to bring the many steps of electronics design into a more connected workflow, so engineers can move from schematic capture to PCB layout, review, and release with fewer handoffs and less friction. In practice, the problem Altium is tackling is the complexity of building modern electronics, where teams need to collaborate across disciplines, keep designs consistent, manage revisions, and share progress with stakeholders who are not always using the same tools.
The company serves electronics engineers and the organisations that employ them, from small design consultancies and start-ups building new devices through to larger manufacturers developing complex products at scale. Users typically include PCB designers, hardware engineers, and engineering managers, as well as adjacent roles such as mechanical engineers, procurement teams, and manufacturing partners who need visibility into design decisions and component choices. Because electronics development often spans multiple locations and suppliers, Altium’s focus on connected design and collaboration is relevant to globally distributed teams.
Within the SaaS ecosystem, Altium sits at the intersection of engineering productivity software and cloud-enabled collaboration. It operates in a specialist category compared with general workplace tools, but it shares familiar SaaS themes such as subscription delivery, ongoing product improvement, and supporting collaboration across teams. For job seekers, that often translates into a product environment where reliability, performance, and trust matter, and where customer needs are shaped by real-world engineering constraints rather than purely digital workflows.
People who tend to thrive at Altium are those who enjoy building products for technical users and can work comfortably with complex domains. Software engineers with experience in desktop applications, cloud services, or scalable collaboration features are likely to find relevant challenges, as are product managers who can translate detailed user feedback into clear roadmaps. There is also room for designers and researchers who can simplify intricate workflows without losing the precision that engineers require, plus customer-facing roles that benefit from an ability to communicate clearly with technically minded users. Given the nature of the product, an interest in electronics, manufacturing, or engineering tools can be a strong advantage, even for roles that are not directly hardware-focused.
What may appeal to candidates is the chance to work on software that has a tangible impact on physical products, from consumer devices to industrial and embedded systems. The work is likely to involve balancing deep technical requirements with usability, supporting collaboration across teams, and maintaining high standards for accuracy and data integrity. For job seekers who want to build specialised SaaS products with long-term customer relationships and a clear link between software and the real world, Altium can be an attractive place to grow.