Full-Time
Posted on 9/23/2025
Enterprise software enabling data-driven transformation
$90k - $110k/yr
Palo Alto, CA, USA
Hybrid
Hybrid role; occasional work-from-home 1-2 days per week.
Palantir builds software that helps large organizations run their digital transformation by giving them tools to access, connect, and analyze all of their data. Its platforms pull data from many sources, clean and link it, and then let users explore dashboards, reports, and AI-powered insights to make informed decisions. Unlike many analytics tools that focus on one data source or a single function, Palantir emphasizes an integrated, enterprise-wide data foundation with governance and security to support complex environments. The goal is to turn raw data into actionable intelligence that guides strategy and operations, helping clients deploy and scale transformative programs.
Company Size
5,001-10,000
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
Aventura, Florida
Founded
2003
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Transparency
Take-What-You-Need Time Off Policy
Family Support
Community
Equity
Mental Health and Wellbeing
Healthcare
Palantir and Advanced Micro Devices are expected to deliver strong growth in the 2026 Q1 earnings season, with both companies set to report in early May. Palantir's previous quarter saw total sales reach $1.4 billion, up 70% year-over-year, with US sales particularly strong at $1.1 billion, growing 93%. Analysts expect earnings to soar 123% with revenues up 73% in the upcoming release. The company has benefited from growing importance in the defence industry. AMD posted strong results in its latest quarter, with Data Center sales reaching a record $5.4 billion, up nearly 40%. The chipmaker expects 33% earnings growth on 32% higher sales. Both companies have seen bullish-to-stable analyst revisions in recent months. Palantir reports on 4 May, whilst AMD follows on 5 May.
Palantir's stock has fallen nearly 40% from its all-time high, despite continuing to deliver strong financial results. The AI software company's revenue grew 70% year over year in Q4 2025, with analysts expecting 74% growth in Q1 2026. However, the stock faces valuation concerns. Palantir trades at 92 times forward earnings and 191 times trailing earnings, meaning the market has already priced in the company doubling its earnings this year. For the valuation to reach more reasonable levels of 30 to 50 times forward earnings, Palantir would need to double or triple its earnings after 2026. The company's AI-powered data analytics software has proven successful across both government and commercial sectors, with commercial revenue becoming the stronger division since 2023. Despite solid growth fundamentals, investors appear increasingly concerned about the premium valuation.
Palantir CEO Alex Karp says working at his $316 billion software company provides better credentials than degrees from Harvard or Yale. During an August 2025 earnings call, Karp stated that once employees join Palantir, "no one cares" about their educational background. The company has launched the Meritocracy Fellowship, a four-month paid internship for high school graduates considering alternatives to university. However, applicants still require SAT scores of at least 1460 or ACT scores of 33, both above the 98th percentile. Despite recruiting young talent, Karp revealed plans to reduce Palantir's workforce by 500 employees, aiming to achieve "10x revenue" with just 3,600 people, down from 4,100. The reduction strategy relies on AI-driven efficiency gains whilst maintaining revenue growth near $1 billion per quarter.
Airship startup Kelluu raises €15M from NATO, its first investment in Finland. Tides are rising for arctic startups. Defence is a multi-modal concept, and today a startup focused on building a stronger pipeline of intelligence data from a higher vantage point is announcing some funding. Kelluu, which is developing airship fleets for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance needs, has raised a Series A of €15 million. The NATO Innovation Fund (NIF) is leading the round, its first investment in a startup in Finland. Kelluu is not a stranger to NATO. The startup had already been through two phases of NATO's DIANA programme, successfully showing and testing its hardware and software in numerous defence exercises attended by Alliance MoDs. Kelluu does not disclose who its customers are, but CEO and co-founder Janne Hietala said in an interview that it sells to both government and non-government customers, with the former of those growing much faster and now accounting for some 80% of revenues. Airships in themselves are in some ways the antithesis of drones when it comes to the new wave of defence: the first airship was flown in the 1850s and used for heavy-lift applications; and they are not known for being the fastest vessels in the sky. But they have a lot of advantages that other air-based systems do not, Hietala pointed out. They are lighter than air, and require no energy to stay up, making them particularly well suited for ISR applications in artifice conditions. "It's the physics," he said. There is a lot of room for development, he added. Kelluu is playing into the current market of MoDs looking for faster and cheaper production of more systems to complement, and maybe even replace, some of the more "exquisite" weapons and devices that they have been buying for years. "MoDs are looking for technology that is smaller and more manufacturable to develop persistent ISR for arctic environments," said Hietala. Kelluu's current generation of airships has airtime of 12 hours and can go up to 200km in range (with altitude of 1-2km). It is preparing to release the second generation of its vessels later this year that will be capable of multiple days of flight. Kelluu was founded in 2018 and focused initially on civilian applications like forestry. The war in Ukraine changed that focus - not least because Kelluu is based in Joensuu, which is just over the border from Russia. Although it came later to defence, that business has grown much faster, Hietala said. Notably, he spoke to RM en route to Canada for yet another exercise and demonstration: about half of the dozen exercises it has carried out so far have been in arctic environments. The company does not work in a bubble and very much sees itself as part of bigger defence solutions. It noted that Exercise Steadfast Dart 26 in February in Germany, which it describes as a "10,000 troop, 13 nation multi-domain NATO exercise," Kelluu integrated in real-time with Palantir's Maven Smart System to provide live video and geolocation data directly to allied forces. "We think it's an interesting commercial capability in eastern flank and high north," Patrick Schneider-Sikorsky, a NIF partner, told RM. "It's more resistant to adverse weather conditions than other ISR and can stay up for longer and can cover wide territories. Those are commercially interesting to MoDs."
Palantir shares rose 3.3% to $132.37 after Cathie Wood's ARK Invest purchased $11 million worth of shares across five exchange-traded funds. The software company's stock has fallen more than 25% this year amid concerns about AI disruption in the software sector. Palantir reported strong February earnings, with 70% year-over-year revenue growth and a $1.5 billion revenue projection for Q1 2026. However, shares trade at 99 times forward earnings, raising questions about sustainability. Wood's flagship ARK Innovation ETF is down 7.6% in 2026 but has gained 56.8% over the past 12 months. The investment suggests confidence in Palantir's growth prospects despite elevated valuations. President Donald Trump endorsed the company on Friday, praising its military technology capabilities.