Full-Time

Engineering Manager

m/f/x

Posted on 7/18/2025

Commercetools

Commercetools

501-1,000 employees

Cloud-based eCommerce platform with API-first

No salary listed

Valencia, Spain

Hybrid

Hybrid role in Valencia with relocation sponsorship available; 60 days Workation option and mixed on-site/remote requirements. If hybrid: specify in-office days? Not stated.

Category
Engineering Management (7)
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Required Skills
Agile
Management
Requirements
  • Multiple years of experience as a manager of software engineers in a distributed product team
  • An engineering background with ability to hands-on code
  • Capable of hands-on coding where possible (e.g. review PRs, smaller tasks, pairing), software architecture, and system design
  • Track record and passion for growing, coaching, and mentoring your team
  • An excellent understanding of agile software development methodologies, best practices, and tools. You know their trade-offs and how they can support a smooth delivery of your team’s goals
  • Excellent communication skills and an empathetic and self-reflective mindset
  • Fluent written and spoken English skills to work in an international environment
  • Commitment to knowledge sharing and learning from everyone around you about leadership and new technologies
Responsibilities
  • Responsible for the people and culture in your team: You are vital for making your team a better place by growing your people and investing in your team’s health, motivation, career, culture, and team building
  • You foster a culture of mutual constructive feedback and support in your team and that everyone feels safe to express their ideas and suggestions
  • You conduct great 1-1 with your engineers
  • Responsible for the delivery and the processes of your team: You are crucial for getting things rolling and ensuring a smooth delivery
  • You are removing blockers and seeking process improvements collaboratively with your team and your Product Manager
  • Champion our tech vision and consult the engineers accordingly
  • Collaborative with Engineering Managers of other teams, Tech Leads, Agile Coaches, a People Business Partner, Head of Engineering, and the CTO
Desired Qualifications
  • Nice to have: Experience in the commerce industry

Commercetools provides a cloud-based eCommerce platform built around an API-first architecture. It helps businesses create and manage online stores by offering modular services accessed through APIs, including GraphQL, REST, and other integrations, enabling easy connection with existing systems and scalable performance. The platform supports core eCommerce functions such as catalogs, carts, orders, and customer data, all delivered via a cloud-based, subscription-priced service that can scale to different business sizes. What sets Commercetools apart from competitors is its API-first, headless approach that emphasizes flexible integrations and modern technologies to tailor digital commerce experiences across channels and systems. The company's goal is to enable businesses of all sizes to build, deploy, and scale digital commerce quickly and efficiently through a flexible, API-driven platform.

Company Size

501-1,000

Company Stage

Series C

Total Funding

$300.8M

Headquarters

Munich, Germany

Founded

2006

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Surpassed $100B GMV run-rate Q1 2026 with 41% YoY order growth across 36 countries.
  • JD Sports partners for one-click AI purchases via Copilot, targeting US rollout May 2026.
  • Acquia Digital Commerce launched January 2026 integrates composable platform for omnichannel experiences.

What critics are saying

  • AI channels like ChatGPT commoditize backend role, eroding pricing power within 12-24 months.
  • Stripe's Agentic Protocol enables Shopify and SAP to match capabilities, stripping first-mover edge in 18-36 months.
  • Customer data breach in AI Hub exposes 1B records, triggering GDPR fines and churn in 12-24 months.

What makes Commercetools unique

  • Commercetools delivers cloud-native, API-first composable commerce for enterprises like Audi and Sephora.
  • AgenticLift launched January 2026 connects legacy systems to AI agents without replatforming.
  • Orium's B2B Accelerator certified Q1 2026 accelerates manufacturing implementations with pre-configured workflows.

Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?

Benefits

🩺 100% covered medical, dental & vision insurance

💰 401k with company match

☀️ Up to 60 days/year of remote work

💻 Open learning & development budget

🌴 Generous PTO, vacation, parental leave, holiday & etc

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

2%

1 year growth

0%

2 year growth

3%
Business Matters
Mar 8th, 2026
John Lewis to sell via ChatGPT and TikTok in youth push

John Lewis to sell via ChatGPT and TikTok in youth push. John Lewis is preparing to enter a new era of retail by selling products through artificial intelligence platforms and social media, as the historic department store seeks to attract younger shoppers and modernise its business model. The retailer has launched a multimillion-pound strategy centred on what it calls "AI-powered shopping", enabling its products to appear in recommendations generated by chatbots such as ChatGPT and Google Gemini. The move forms part of a wider digital expansion designed to place the brand directly within the new tools consumers increasingly use to search for products and inspiration. Alongside the push into AI platforms, the chain will also begin trialling sales through TikTok Shop, the fast-growing social commerce marketplace embedded within the TikTok app. Executives hope the initiative will help broaden the appeal of the 162-year-old retailer beyond its traditional customer base. Under the new system, users interacting with AI chatbots will be able to receive recommendations for John Lewis products when searching for items such as clothing, homeware or gifts. For example, a customer could ask a chatbot to suggest a spring outfit for a party within a certain budget, and the AI could recommend a shirt stocked by John Lewis if it fits the user's criteria. Over time, the retailer hopes shoppers will be able to complete purchases directly within the AI interface itself, as developers roll out embedded checkout features across conversational platforms. The shift reflects growing evidence that artificial intelligence is becoming a starting point for online shopping journeys. Research from KPMG found that 30 per cent of consumers aged between 25 and 34 had already used chatbots to search for deals and product suggestions. Retail analyst Jonathan De Mello said the development reflects broader changes in consumer behaviour. "Retailers are embracing AI as a mechanism to reach a consumer that is relatively tech-savvy, especially the younger generation that uses it for almost everything," he said. "It's becoming part of how people explore and discover products." In parallel with the AI initiative, John Lewis will begin selling selected products through TikTok Shop. Initially, the offering will focus on beauty products and gift items, categories considered well suited to the social media platform's influencer-driven shopping model. Since launching in 2021, TikTok Shop has become a major force in UK e-commerce. During last year's Black Friday event, the platform recorded sales of 27 products every second, demonstrating the speed at which social media retail has evolved. Other major retailers have already begun experimenting with the format. Marks & Spencer and Sainsbury's both introduced TikTok Shop sales for selected products last year, signalling growing confidence among established brands in the channel. To enable its products to appear within AI chatbot recommendations, John Lewis has partnered with the commerce technology company Commercetools. The platform translates the retailer's product catalogue into formats compatible with AI search systems, allowing chatbots to recognise John Lewis as a merchant and incorporate its products into recommendations. This process effectively ensures the retailer's catalogue can be interpreted correctly by conversational AI tools and surfaced in relevant searches. Dom McBrien said the strategy is intended to place the retailer directly within the new digital environments where customers are increasingly making purchasing decisions. "These investments will mean that we are right there when customers are looking for ideas," he said. "Being able to quickly and easily buy in a few clicks is a gamechanger." John Lewis is not alone in exploring AI-driven commerce. Sportswear retailer JD Sports has previously indicated plans to enable customers to make purchases directly through AI apps in the future. Meanwhile, technology companies are actively building tools to integrate retail within conversational platforms. Earlier this year Google announced partnerships allowing purchases through its Gemini AI platform, while ChatGPT has already trialled instant checkout tools in the United States. The rapid development of AI shopping tools has prompted discussion among legal experts and regulators about how recommendations, advertising disclosures and consumer protection rules will apply in conversational commerce. The push into AI and social commerce comes as John Lewis attempts to revitalise its fortunes following several difficult years. The retailer operates 36 department stores across the UK and first launched its online shop in 2001. Today, online transactions account for around 60 per cent of total sales. Its parent company, John Lewis Partnership, also owns the supermarket chain Waitrose. The partnership is currently undergoing a major turnaround led by chairman Jason Tarry, a former Tesco executive who took over leadership in 2024 following the departure of Sharon White. Tarry has launched a wide-ranging programme aimed at restoring profitability, modernising operations and strengthening the brand's competitiveness in a rapidly evolving retail landscape. Later this week the John Lewis Partnership will publish its results for the 2025-26 financial year. Speculation has been growing that the company may reinstate staff bonuses, which have not been paid since January 2022. At its peak, the annual bonus for employees, known internally as "partners", reached as high as 15 per cent of salary. The employee-owned structure means roughly 70,000 staff members share in the company's profits when bonuses are declared. Although the group is expected to miss its £200 million profit target, analysts believe management may still consider restoring the payment in order to boost morale following years of restructuring, store closures and cost-cutting. For a brand synonymous with traditional British retail values, the shift toward AI-powered commerce represents a significant strategic pivot. Executives believe that embedding the company within AI platforms and social commerce environments will ensure John Lewis remains visible as consumer habits evolve. As conversational AI becomes a new gateway to online shopping, the retailer hopes its early investment will ensure it remains relevant in the next generation of digital retail. Jamie young. Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting. Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops. When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders. March 8, 2026

Trend Hunter
Jan 27th, 2026
Agentic AI Shopping Layers

Agentic AI shopping layers. Commercetools AgenticLift connects legacy commerce to AI buying. Edited by Colin Smith - January 27, 2026 - Tech Commercetools has launched AgenticLift, a standalone agentic commerce layer that connects enterprise commerce stacks to AI-driven shopping channels. Rather than forcing a replatform, the product sits on top of existing systems and exposes product data and transaction logic to AI agents. It targets large organizations that want to participate in AI-influenced buying journeys while maintaining their current commerce infrastructure. AgenticLift plugs into commercetools' AI Hub, which supplies real-time access to catalog, pricing, and transaction data under enterprise-grade security and governance. The layer supports agent-led discovery, cart creation, and checkout workflows that surface inside AI assistants such as ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and Microsoft Copilot. commercetools has aligned the product with emerging agentic commerce protocols, including the Model Context Protocol and Stripe's Agentic Commerce Protocol. For enterprises across retail, manufacturing, and distribution, AgenticLift provides a controlled path to test and scale AI-powered buying experiences. Teams can keep their business rules, compliance frameworks, and pricing logic intact while exposing shoppable experiences to AI intermediaries. The release reflects a broader shift toward modular, AI-ready commerce architectures that prioritize interoperability over full-stack replacement. Image Credit: Commercetools Trend Themes 1. AI-driven Shopping Experiences - Companies are exploring AI-driven shopping experiences that integrate seamlessly with existing commerce systems, offering shoppers personalized and efficient buying journeys. 2. Agentic Commerce Protocols - The introduction of agentic commerce protocols supports the creation of AI-compatible transaction workflows, enhancing the precision and personalization of retail interactions. 3. Modular Commerce Layers - Businesses are pivoting towards modular commerce layers that prioritize AI interoperability and allow for flexible, adaptive shopping infrastructures without the need for replatforming. Industry Implications 1. Retail Technology - Retail technology is being reshaped by AI advancements enabling new layers of personalization and efficiency through non-disruptive solutions like agentic shopping layers. 2. Enterprise Software - Enterprise software solutions are increasingly incorporating AI capabilities that align with existing business infrastructures, facilitating a seamless transition to AI-enhanced operations. 3. E-commerce Platforms - E-commerce platforms are evolving to support AI-driven functionalities that enrich user interaction and streamline digital transactions across diverse retail ecosystems. Popularity

PR Newswire
Jan 21st, 2026
commercetools launches AgenticLift to help enterprises accelerate AI-driven commerce revenue without replatforming

commercetools has launched AgenticLift, a standalone agentic offering that enables enterprises to participate in AI-driven shopping experiences without replatforming. The solution allows companies to connect legacy or homegrown systems to AI-powered discovery, carting and checkout flows through commercetools AI Hub. AgenticLift lets enterprises capture revenue from AI shopping channels including ChatGPT, Google Gemini and Microsoft Copilot whilst maintaining existing commerce operations. The platform provides enterprise-grade security and governance whilst allowing businesses to modernise at their own pace. Built on commercetools' platform, AgenticLift supports multiple agentic platforms through a unified foundation. Early interest spans retail, manufacturing and distribution sectors, with organisations seeking practical ways to stay visible in AI shopping moments whilst preparing for long-term transformation.

The Standard
Jan 12th, 2026
JD Sports reveals plans to enable shoppers to buy products through AI platforms

JD Sports reveals plans to enable shoppers to buy products through AI platforms. The sportswear giant's tech boss told the Press Association it believes AI is 'the future of how people will shop'. The JD Sports store in Oxford Street, London (Jonathan Brady/PA) JD Sports has revealed plans to allow customers to directly buy their products through AI platforms without leaving the apps. It is the latest move by a major retailer to adapt to a shift by consumers towards using AI platforms such as ChatGPT and Copilot. The sportswear giant's tech boss told the Press Association that it believes AI is "the future of how people will shop" and JD plans to be at the forefront of the technology. JD Sports said it is partnering with Commercetools and payment firm Stripe to allow "one-click purchases" through AI platforms. It said it will launch the technology in the US in the coming months. The group hopes to expand this in other regions but will adapt to the regulatory environments in different countries as policymakers adapt to AI. Jetan Chowk, JD's chief technology and transformation officer, said: "We think AI is the future of how people will shop, and we want to stay at the forefront of how they shop. "What we are currently seeing is that customers are regularly using AI apps to research and discover the products they want to buy. "We can see that already and want to ensure we are moving early to meet customers and their needs in that space." Mr Chowk said they have seen AI usage particularly boom among the retailer's core demographic of shoppers aged between 18 and 24. The launch will start by linking up with Microsoft Copilot before extending this to other leading large language models (LLMs). US customers will be able to find and buy JD Sports products using the AI platforms for the entire shopping process, including integrated payments. Regis Schultz, group chief executive of JD Sports Fashion, said: "This strengthens our digital proposition for customers, and keeps us moving in line with the fast-changing retail landscape. "We see AI as a real opportunity to improve our customers' experience with JD, as well as making our own operations more efficient, and so I'm really pleased that with this big step forward we are putting our words into action."

Electronic Payments International
Mar 27th, 2025
Commercetools unveils Payment Hub

Commercetools unveils Payment Hub.

INACTIVE