We're building a scalable dating app platform designed to launch multiple branded apps from one core system. We're looking for engineers, creators, marketers, and builders who want real startup experience — and the chance to help shape something from the beginning.
Not just another app idea. The product is actively in development.
Flyrt is building a platform-first approach to dating apps. Instead of creating just one app, we're creating a core system that can support multiple branded experiences, faster launches, and scalable growth.
The foundation is already in development. We're now bringing in early contributors to help take it further.
The best time to join a startup is before everyone else knows about it.
Work directly on a live startup product — not fake class projects or hypothetical case studies.
Your work directly shapes the product, brand, and growth strategy — not buried in a backlog.
Ship real work across mobile apps, backend systems, branding, growth campaigns, and launch strategy.
Early involvement can turn into larger roles as the company grows. Get in before the door closes.
We're currently interested in two main areas.
You don't need years of experience. We care most about skill, creativity, initiative, and the ability to execute.
Real work. Real output. Real impact.
App UI and feature development
Notifications and onboarding flows
Brand identity for new app launches
Social media content and launch campaigns
Ad creatives and audience testing
Growth experiments across multiple brands
Tell us who you are and how you'd like to contribute.
Compensation depends on role, experience, and stage of involvement. Early applicants may also be considered for longer-term opportunities as the company grows.
No. We value strong skills, initiative, and execution ability over formal startup experience.
Yes. This opportunity is specifically well-suited for ambitious students and early-career builders looking for real portfolio work.
Some roles can be flexible depending on fit and type of work. We'll discuss logistics with qualified applicants.
Not necessarily. A portfolio, GitHub, design work, or examples of things you've built are often more useful than a traditional resume.