Full-Time

IT – End User Services & Desktop Support Engineer

Posted on 3/10/2026

TXSE

TXSE

51-200 employees

Electronic exchange for listings and trading

No salary listed

Dallas, TX, USA

In Person

Category
IT & Security (1)
Required Skills
PowerShell
Microsoft Azure
LDAP
Microsoft Intune
SCCM
Linux/Unix
Requirements
  • Bachelor’s degree required; Computer Science, Information Systems, or related field preferred
  • 5+ years of IT support experience in enterprise environments, with strong knowledge of Windows operating system and hardware; ability to learn macOS and Linux
  • Experience with Microsoft Entra ID, Active Directory, Exchange Online, and Microsoft 365
  • Proficiency with PowerShell and Microsoft Graph API for orchestration and automation of account and service provisioning, with familiarity in code versioning and change control processes
  • Hands-on experience with endpoint management and ITSM platforms (Intune, Jamf, SCCM, Jira Service Management or similar)
  • Strong communication skills with proven ability to support users onsite
  • Ability to lift and move IT equipment up to 50 lbs
Responsibilities
  • Providing in-person end-user and desktop support, resolving incidents in line with ITIL practices and escalating to Engineering or Development teams when appropriate
  • Administering Microsoft Entra ID, Active Directory, Exchange Online, and Microsoft 365 to maintain secure and reliable access to business systems
  • Managing endpoint environments with Intune, SCCM, and Jamf, including provisioning, compliance enforcement, patching, and application deployment
  • Supporting operating systems and hardware across Windows, macOS, and mobile platforms (with macOS and Linux learnable on the job)
  • Leveraging automation (PowerShell, Microsoft Graph API, and related tools) to reduce manual effort, streamline provisioning, and improve overall operational efficiency
  • Documenting and refining support processes to improve service quality and reduce recurring issues
  • Applying and enforcing security standards (MFA, conditional access, endpoint protection), monitoring system health and performance, and providing reporting and recommendations to maintain stability and resiliency
Desired Qualifications
  • Experience with virtualization and desktop delivery platforms (VMware, Hyper-V, Citrix, Azure Virtual Desktop, AWS)
  • Scripting and automation beyond core requirements (Python, Ansible, Terraform, or similar)
  • Experience with voice, video, and collaboration platforms (Zoom, Microsoft Teams, or similar)
  • Knowledge of software packaging, scripted installations, and deployments
  • Experience running technology product initiatives, including evaluations, requirements gathering, business case development, and full project delivery
  • Chocolatey Software Packages
  • Certifications such as A+, MCP, MCSE, CCNA, RHCSA (or equivalent)

TXSE Group plans to launch the Texas Stock Exchange, a fully electronic national securities exchange that provides a new trading and listing venue for public companies, ETPs, and ADRs. The platform operates as an electronic market where issuers pay listing and trading fees, enabling U.S. and global companies to access public capital. It differentiates itself by offering stable, predictable listing standards and costs, backed by support from major financial institutions, and by serving both issuers and ETP sponsors on a nationwide scale. The goal is to give issuers a transparent, cost-conscious path to public markets and a scalable way to raise capital through a nationwide trading platform.

Company Size

51-200

Company Stage

Growth Equity (Non-Venture Capital)

Total Funding

$250M

Headquarters

Houston, Texas

Founded

2023

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • TXSE raised $275M from BlackRock, Citadel, Schwab, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs.
  • Hired Nasdaq's Ferrari as COO, NYSE's Hocker for listings, Cboe's Marrocco for $11T ETPs.
  • SEC-approved platform tested, connected to dozens of firms for July 2026 trading launch.

What critics are saying

  • NYSE and Nasdaq cut fees, undercutting TXSE pricing and poaching issuers within 3-6 months.
  • Launch delays past July 2026 from SEC NMS plans and testing failures erode first-listing momentum.
  • Low liquidity commitments cause wide spreads at launch, deterring ETP sponsors immediately.

What makes TXSE unique

  • TXSE offers transparent economics and stable listing standards unlike NYSE-Nasdaq duopoly.
  • Headquartered in Dallas, TXSE leverages Texas's business-friendly laws and 1,000 seQ public companies.
  • TXSE imposes stricter earnings tests and price requirements, excluding 1,700 legacy-listed firms.

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

Benefits

Hybrid Work Options

Flexible Work Hours

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

0%

1 year growth

7%

2 year growth

23%
Bloomberg L.P.
Mar 19th, 2026
Texas Stock Exchange poaches Nasdaq and NYSE executives to lead listings push

The Texas Stock Exchange has hired Greg Ferrari, former head of North American exchange trading at Nasdaq, as chief operating officer, and Liz Hocker, former regional head of capital markets at NYSE, as global head of listings and capital markets. The Dallas-based exchange, backed by Michael Dell, BlackRock and major asset managers, expects to start secondary market trading in summer 2026, with exchange-traded product listings arriving later that year. IPOs are planned for 2027. TXSE has raised $275 million from investors including BlackRock, Citadel Securities and Charles Schwab. The exchange aims to capitalise on Texas's growing corporate presence, competing with established rivals Nasdaq and NYSE. Ferrari will relocate to Dallas, whilst Hocker will focus on attracting initial public offerings to the startup exchange.

Traders Magazine
Mar 18th, 2026
Texas Stock Exchange ramps up push into U.S. Listings market.

Texas Stock Exchange ramps up push into U.S. Listings market. March 18, 2026 The Texas Stock Exchange is stepping up efforts to enter the U.S. listings market, launching a national advertising campaign and continuing to add industry participants as it prepares to begin trading. The Dallas-based exchange said it aims to introduce new competition to a listings market long dominated by the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq. The exchange has raised $275 million in capital from global financial institutions and said it has invested in leadership and technology as it works toward bringing the venue to market. Earlier this month, TXSE launched a campaign tied to the anniversary of the Texas Declaration of Independence. According to the company, the campaign includes national television spots and high-visibility outdoor advertising in downtown Dallas and carries the slogan "Welcome to the real bull market." "2026 is the year companies will finally be able to declare independence from the New York listing duopoly," said James H. Lee, founder, chairman and CEO of TXSE. "Issuer alignment is the organizing principle of our exchange and transparency is the standard, not the exception," he said. Lee said the exchange is designed to bring additional competition to U.S. public markets. "We are sending a clear message that the next chapter of American capital markets will be written in Texas, not by the legacy jurisdictions and exchanges that have made it unnecessarily difficult and costly for companies to go and remain public," he said. A TXSE spokesperson told Traders Magazine the exchange's approach reflects feedback gathered from corporate executives over several years. According to the spokesperson, the company spent time listening to CEOs of public companies who expressed frustration with rising listing costs, shifting governance standards and what the spokesperson described as limited transparency around exchange economics. Those conversations led to what the spokesperson described as a consensus among some executives that legacy exchanges often "do more to them than for them." TXSE, the spokesperson said, aims to address those concerns by offering "transparent economics and governance standards rooted in alignment rather than shifting institutional mandates." The exchange said its technology platform has already been built and tested and is connected to dozens of member firms ahead of launch. Industry firms have begun joining the exchange as members, including Dallas-based broker-dealer CAPIS. "You might find this hard to believe, but I think James Lee is downplaying the seismic shift that is underway," commented David Choate, executive director of sales and trading and chief operating officer at CAPIS. Choate said the exchange is emerging alongside broader developments in Texas that he believes could make the state more attractive to companies. He pointed to the state's reputation as a business-friendly environment and noted that Texas has attracted several additional Fortune 500 companies in recent years. Choate also cited Texas capital formation legislation and corporate law reforms, along with a constitutional amendment intended to eliminate the possibility of a financial transactions tax in the state. "Together, these create the foundation for an extremely attractive alternative to the current listing options," he said. Choate acknowledged that established exchanges have longstanding positions in the market. "Status quo and the resistance to change are difficult foes," he said. "These may take years to overcome." Still, he said he believes additional competition in listings could emerge over time. "There is no reason to believe that New York will be able to maintain their monopoly over public listings, especially when a business-friendly environment, such as Texas, is offering a more attractive alternative," Choate said. "TXSE has the chance to materially change the model. And I expect them to be successful," he concluded.

Yahoo Finance
Mar 17th, 2026
Texas' 'Y'all Street' boom faces talent crisis as 62% of under-35s avoid abortion ban states

Texas companies face growing hiring challenges as reproductive rights restrictions deter young talent, despite billions in business investment. Whilst the New York Stock Exchange expands into the state, 62% of adults under 35 say they would avoid living in states with abortion bans altogether. Since Texas' abortion ban took effect in 2022, domestic migration has plummeted. Last year, Texas gained just 67,000 residents from other states — the smallest increase in two decades, down from over 200,000 annually before Roe v Wade was overturned. Nearly one in five people planning families have moved or know someone who relocated due to abortion restrictions. The healthcare infrastructure is deteriorating, with nearly half of Texas counties now classified as maternity care deserts. One-third of Bumble's Austin-based workforce relocated out of Texas whilst remaining employed.

Hoodline
Mar 11th, 2026
Texas Stock Exchange Zeroes In On Uptown Dallas Tower For New HQ

Texas Stock Exchange zeroes in on Uptown Dallas tower for new HQ. Published on March 11, 2026 The Texas Stock Exchange is closing in on a permanent Dallas headquarters, and people familiar with the search say one leading contender is the new Bank of America Tower at Parkside in Uptown. A move there would plant the exchange just off Klyde Warren Park and in the middle of banks, trading floors and a growing wave of corporate projects reshaping the neighborhood. For now, TXSE is still working out of a temporary office in the Knox/Henderson area as it gears up to launch trading in 2026. As reported by The Dallas Morning News, Bank of America Tower at Parkside is one of several Uptown and downtown options on TXSE leadership's shortlist. The outlet notes that the exchange, first announced in 2024 with early backing from firms including BlackRock, Citadel Securities and Charles Schwab, has now grown its capital base to about $270 million, and that Pacific Elm declined to comment for the story. According to TXSE, the exchange received registration approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last fall and is on pace to offer trading and listings in 2026. Advisers told Bloomberg Law that the platform could be ready to begin matching trades in early 2026. Parkside puts TXSE in the middle of the action. Parkside Uptown is rising as a 30-story, roughly 500,000-square-foot trophy office tower just north of Klyde Warren Park, with large floorplates and tenant terraces aimed squarely at corporate headquarters users, according to the project website and a JLL financing release. Developer KDC is building the tower for owners Pacific Elm Properties, the Miyama family and Sixth Street Capital, and leasing materials show Bank of America has already pre-leased a significant share of the space. The combination of size, amenities and a walkable location is exactly the sort of package a high-profile Texas-based exchange would be expected to seek. Dallas' 'y'all Street' ambitions get A potential anchor. A TXSE headquarters at Parkside would plug neatly into Dallas' broader "Y'all Street" strategy, the push to position the city as a national finance hub. As per Hoodline, projects such as Goldman Sachs' large multi-acre campus and JPMorgan's recent growth around Klyde Warren are helping turn Uptown and Victory Park into a finance corridor that could support an exchange, its listings and the service firms that tend to follow. TXSE has not yet named a final site for its so-called Texas Market Center, and the exchange still lists only a temporary office and suite address in Dallas on its website. If Parkside does win out, project materials show the tower is scheduled to deliver in 2027, which means any full relocation into the Uptown high-rise would trail the building's opening and the next round of lease negotiations.

BitRss
Nov 24th, 2025
J.P. Morgan Invests $250M in TXSE

J.P. Morgan has invested $250M in the Texas Stock Exchange (TXSE), joining backers like BlackRock, Charles Schwab, and Citadel Securities. TXSE, set to launch in early 2026, aims to challenge the NYSE and Nasdaq by focusing on transparency and issuer alignment. The exchange has secured support from 82 financial institutions, including major liquidity providers. J.P. Morgan will also have a board observer seat, enhancing its strategic influence.

INACTIVE