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Forward Deployed Engineer Working Student (m/f/d)

praxipal3 months agoUpdated 3 days agoWorking Student
On-siteEnglish requiredGerman requiredTechCloud & DevOps

Required skills

SentryLangfuseGrafana

Job description

praxipal posted this role. Below, we break down what it means for a working student in Berlin: your weekly hours, take-home pay and visa limits. You can also open ChatGPT or Claude with a ready-made prompt to tailor your CV, check your fit, draft a cover letter or prep for the interview.

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Description provided by praxipal

At praxipal, we are building an AI-powered healthcare admin workforce to address the global shortage of medical staff.

Medical assistants are too valuable to spend their days chasing callbacks, cleaning up schedules, sending repetitive messages, or wrestling with invoicing and documentation workflows. Staff should spend time on patients. That’s why we build Luna.

Our AI receptionist, Luna, answers and automates phone calls and she’s loved by more than 100 medical practices. Right now, we’re expanding her from calls to end-to-end patient communication across any channel. Over the next years, we’ll grow her into an AI worker that automates all administrative processes in medical practices, embedded directly into the systems teams already use.

We’re backed by one of Europe’s leading investors and are one of the fastest growing healthtech startups in Germany. Our team has previously worked and studied at Palantir, Amazon, SAP, the University of Cambridge, and Hasso Plattner Institute.

We are hiring a Forward Deployed Engineer Working Student to take technical ownership of our most important customer deployments.

The Role

This is a hands-on role with end-to-end responsibility for customer deployments and technical success.

You will work directly with a subset of our customers, configure and customize our product to their specific environments, and ensure that Luna works reliably in real-world healthcare settings.

This role sits at the intersection of engineering, product, and customer reality.

The role is on-site in Berlin and requires fluent German.

What You’ll Do

  • Own the technical onboarding of new customers, from first deployment to stable production usage

  • Configure and customize Luna to fit different practice setups, workflows, and constraints

  • Act as the technical point of contact for your customers when things don’t behave as expected

  • Help investigate and resolve production issues affecting customers, and turn learnings into lasting fixes

What We’re Looking For

Must-Have

  • Hands-on programming experience

  • Proven ability to own software or technical systems end-to-end

  • Comfortable working directly with customers on technical topics

  • Fluent German (spoken and written)

  • Looking forward to working on-site in Berlin in a fast-moving environment in build-mode

Nice-to-Have

  • Prior experience in startups or scale-ups

  • Experience with observability and debugging tools (e.g. Sentry, Grafana, Langfuse)

  • Prior responsibility for customer-facing technical work

Location & Compensation

  • Location: Berlin (100% on-site)

  • Hours: 20 hours per week

  • Compensation: Competitive Compensation

  • Office perks: A beautiful workspace in Berlin Mitte, complete with a ping pong table, PlayStation, and VR setup.

  • Team bonding: Regular get-togethers and happy hours.

  • Health and productivity: Free dinners, subsidized lunches and sponsored Urban Sports Club subscription.

If you want to shape the next generation of healthcare software with us, apply now.

Working student essentials

What this Tech working student role in Berlin means for you: the weekly-hours rules, the social-contribution perks, and what international students should check before applying.

Weekly hours

Working students may work up to 20 hours a week during the semester and full-time during the breaks. Staying within this keeps your student status and the Werkstudent benefits.

Working student rules

Social contributions

Under the Werkstudentenprivileg you're exempt from health, care and unemployment insurance contributions — only pension insurance applies. That leaves more net pay than a regular job.

Check your insurance

International students

Non-EU students can work 140 full or 280 half days per year (raised from 120/240 in March 2024). A working student contract usually fits within this — confirm the exact limits printed on your residence permit.

Studying in Germany

Frequently asked questions

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