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About Us

Postman builds software that helps teams design, test, document, and maintain APIs throughout their lifecycle. In practice, it provides a workspace where developers and other stakeholders can collaborate on API requests, collections, environments, automated tests, and documentation, so that building and integrating services is more consistent and less error prone. The problem it addresses is familiar to any organisation shipping software at scale, APIs are central to modern products, but they are often hard to standardise, validate, and share across teams. Postman focuses on making that work repeatable and collaborative, from early exploration through to ongoing monitoring and change management.

The product is used by a wide range of people involved in building and operating software. That includes individual developers, QA and test engineers, platform and DevOps teams, and increasingly product and technical writing functions that contribute to API documentation and developer experience. Postman’s user base spans startups and large enterprises, as well as public sector and education, because API driven development is common across industries. You can reasonably expect the company to care about usability for both solo users and larger organisations that need governance, access control, and shared standards.

Within the SaaS ecosystem, Postman sits at the intersection of developer tooling, collaboration software, and API management. It is not a general purpose coding platform, rather it complements IDEs, CI systems, and cloud platforms by providing a shared layer for working with APIs and the artefacts around them. That position means the company is closely tied to trends like microservices, integrations, and platform engineering, and it needs to balance a strong self serve product experience with the requirements of larger customers who operate at scale.

People who tend to thrive at Postman are those comfortable working on products for technical audiences and who care about developer experience. Engineering roles are likely to involve building reliable, performant web applications and backend services, as well as working with API standards and security considerations. Product, design, and research roles benefit from an ability to translate complex technical workflows into clear, intuitive experiences. Go to market and customer facing roles often suit people who can communicate credibly with engineers, understand how software teams work, and support adoption across both grassroots users and enterprise stakeholders.

What may appeal to job seekers is the clarity of the mission and the direct connection to how modern software is built. Developer tools companies often have fast feedback loops because users are vocal and usage patterns are measurable, which can be rewarding if you like iterating based on real behaviour. The work also tends to be cross functional, since improving an API workflow can touch product design, documentation, community education, and integrations with other tools. If you enjoy building for a global community of technical users, and you value a product led environment where collaboration and craft matter, Postman is the kind of company that can be a strong fit.