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In 2026, how might engineers ‘get noticed’ by large tech organisations?

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SiliconRepublic.com spoke with experts from Yahoo Mail about standing out in a competitive field and the opportunities open to jobseekers.

“Yahoo Mail is in the midst of our most significant engineering transformation in over a decade,” said Nikhil Gandhi, the senior vice-president of engineering at Yahoo Mail

“We’re building a ground-up mobile redesign and a modernised desktop experience and embedding unique AI experiences across the product,” he said. “The team in Ireland plays a critical role in continuing to scale our work globally and the engineers we’re hiring have an opportunity to work on products with real reach and impact.”

Kiran Krishna Hegde, a senior manager and systems engineer at Yahoo Mail, explained that for now at the company, the focus is on the intelligence engineering hub in Ireland and moving from team build-out to delivery, making the right key hires and getting new team members onboarded and contributing.

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To meet those needs, he said: “We are looking for engineers with strong fundamentals, sound judgement and real ownership. Coding and system design are the table stakes, but we are not just looking for people who can ship features. We want people who understand scale, reliability, trade-offs and the difference between getting something working and building it properly.”

He is of the opinion that the most suitable candidates for roles in this area are typically the ones with real production experience, who have seen how systems can fail and who have learned how to build more resilient systems as a result. 

“A back-end engineer should understand platform and data concerns,” he said. “A data engineer should think like a software engineer, not just a workflow builder. Above all, we want people who care about engineering craft, can work through complexity and are comfortable being accountable for outcomes.”

He noted that collaboration and a one-team mindset also wouldn’t go amiss, as the Ireland-based team works closely with a larger US-based team, as well as colleagues across the globe, making engineers “who are low-ego, generous with context and motivated as much by collective progress as they are by individual success” valuable to the organisation.

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Standing out

Of the potential challenges or pitfalls Hegde finds too many candidates list responsibilities, rather than explaining the outcomes. Those looking to stand out in a positive way should identify the problems they have solved, what changed and why it mattered in the broader scheme of things. 

“Specific examples always carry more weight than broad claims,” he said. “We also pay attention to how candidates work with others. In a distributed environment, strong engineers do not just produce good individual work, they create clarity, collaborate across teams, share context early and help move the wider group forward. That combination of technical strength and a genuine one-team mindset stands out.”

Often, he explained, the biggest challenge for organisations when considering applicants is not the volume of candidates but rather the quality and whether or not their technical depth, practical experience and engineering judgement match the level required. 

Hegde said: “Titles also do not always translate cleanly. In a market like Dublin, role scope in non-tech-first companies can be quite different, so a senior title on paper does not always mean the person has operated at that level in practice. We see this particularly in data and machine learning engineering, where there is often strong exposure to tools or theory, but less experience building production-grade systems under real scale, latency and reliability constraints.

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“AI has made this harder as well, across the industry. Applications are more polished, but it now takes more effort to separate presentation from substance. That said, getting hired right is never a solo effort, and strong partnership with our recruitment team has been a big part of helping us navigate the local market, calibrate roles properly and keep momentum.”

Take a chance

“For early-career engineers, strong fundamentals matter most,” agreed Karim Al Srag, a director of engineering at Yahoo Mail. “Data structures, algorithms, problem-solving and, depending on the role, systems, data or machine learning basics. A degree helps, but it is only one part of the picture.”

For Al Srag, what matters is evidence of a body of work showing your interest and skill, via side projects, internships, open-source contributions, research and other practical work. “So yes, there are alternatives to traditional education, but whatever route someone takes, they still need to show strong fundamentals and real hands-on ability.”

Once situated, he noted the best support an organisation like Yahoo Mail can offer to new hires is in helping them become productive early on, while also giving professionals the context needed to grow into the role properly.

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“In the Yahoo Mail intelligence hub in Ireland, we use structured onboarding plans for back-end, data and machine learning engineers. These combine targeted reading with practical, evidence-based tasks, so people can get set up properly and start contributing quickly.”

For Hegde, as the Yahoo Mail intelligence hub in Ireland is still being built, he explained it is not an environment where people can disappear into narrow roles or hide behind processes. Instead, he said: “It is a nimble, high-accountability team, which means every hire matters and every meaningful contribution has visible impact.

“If someone wants a very comfortable role with narrow ownership, this is probably not the right fit. But if they want to work with strong engineers, solve meaningful problems and help shape both the systems and the team while it is still taking form, it is a rare opportunity.”

For anyone interested in applying, there are currently openings for two professionals, a principal, senior data engineer and a principal, senior back-end engineer. 

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