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About Us

Radar is a location technology company that provides software tools for adding location awareness to digital products. In practice, that means helping other teams build features such as geofencing, place detection, location based notifications, store and venue experiences, and location driven personalisation without having to build and maintain the underlying infrastructure themselves. The problem Radar is tackling is that reliable location functionality is complex. It involves mobile SDKs, background location behaviour, mapping and geospatial data, accuracy and battery trade offs, and ongoing monitoring and compliance considerations. Radar positions itself as the layer that makes those capabilities easier to implement, operate, and scale.

The company serves product and engineering teams at organisations that want location to be a core part of the customer experience or operations. That can include consumer apps that use location for engagement and discovery, as well as businesses that rely on real world presence such as retail, delivery, logistics, and on demand services. Radar’s customers are likely to be teams that care about fast implementation, consistent performance across platforms, and the ability to manage geofences and location events centrally rather than stitching together multiple providers.

Within the SaaS ecosystem, Radar sits in the developer tools and infrastructure category, with a focus on geospatial and mobile. It is the kind of platform that integrates into an existing stack via APIs and SDKs, and then becomes part of the ongoing operational fabric of a product. That typically brings an emphasis on reliability, clear documentation, observability, and support for production use cases, because customers depend on the service to trigger real time events and power user facing features.

For job seekers, Radar is likely to suit people who enjoy building technical products for other builders. Engineering roles may lean towards backend systems, APIs, geospatial data, distributed systems, and mobile SDKs, alongside a strong focus on performance and developer experience. Product, solutions, and customer facing roles will probably reward those who can translate real world use cases into implementable technical approaches, work closely with customer engineers, and think carefully about privacy and responsible use of location data. Across functions, an interest in shipping practical features, improving reliability, and making complex technology easier to adopt should be valuable.

What may appeal about working at Radar is the clarity of the mission and the tangible nature of the problems. Location is a foundational capability that can unlock many product experiences, but it is also easy to get wrong, so there is meaningful work in making it dependable and straightforward for customers. If you like environments where technical quality matters, where you can see your work used inside other companies’ products, and where cross functional collaboration between engineering, product, and go to market teams is important, Radar is the kind of SaaS company that could be a strong fit.