Performance Engineering-Salesforce--Technical Engineering Jobs
Salesforce CRM Sales Cloud 2 Service Cloud 2 Small Business Communications Financial Services Healthcare the opportunity to excel in a fast-paced, performance-based, competitive atmosphere; and the chance to be surrounded by peers and leaders that inspire, motivate, and innovate
Salesforce is seeking a Performance Engineer to work on a team responsible for measuring the performance of new feature releases of SFDC within aggressive timeframes. The Performance Engineer will focus on developing sophisticated tests that enable Salesforce to perform the most complex load simulations and comprehensive end to end automation in the industry to help ensure the service is blazingly fast and bulletproof. This Performance Engineer will utilize sophisticated custom built Automation frameworks and software tools written in Java and other languages The Performance Engineer must demonstrate the ability to understand novel system architectures, pinpoint problem areas, and develop succinct test plans across multiple hardware and software tiers with little more than verbal conversation
Responsibilities:
Communicate status, risks to test complete dates, and offer mitigation strategies to ensure on-time delivery of all committed projects to cross functional teams
Design and implement overhead, scalability, stability, and stress tests using industry standard tools and custom developed software written in Java
Work closely with the Production Success Performance Team to provide product and automation expertise for use in patches, research projects, sizing, and capacity planning
Report weekly trends highlighting product performance and team status against committed milestones and projects
1+ years software development experience with a distinguished track record on technically demanding projects
Working knowledge of HTTP load generation /measurement software (e
The computer engineer who thinks were doomed (CNET) "The Lights in the Tunnel," by computer engineer Martin Ford, suggests that technology is causing inequalities that markets wont solve. His solutions are, to say the least, radical.