The Short Version
We’re building civic infrastructure that upgrades how America chooses its leaders. We need someone who can help build it.
Not a mass-market app. Not a Silicon Valley startup. A citizen-owned system where candidates and voters actually find each other, without gatekeeper interference.
The tools are: Airtable, Softr, and AI-assisted coding through Claude Code. The real job is translating what citizens need into things that work for them.
About FiNC
We’re upgrading how America chooses its leaders.
Right now, big money and party gatekeepers control who’s “electable” before you ever see a ballot. Good candidates exist everywhere: teachers, veterans, small business owners, community leaders who genuinely want to represent you. But the system is designed to keep them invisible.
FiNC is building the bridge between citizens and the candidates they never get to see. Think of us as a matchmaker for democracy: we learn what citizens care about, we surface candidates who are committed to representing real people, and we give both sides a space to connect directly, without gatekeepers deciding who you get to choose from.
Phase 1 is happening now. The Digital Politics Hub is where citizens share their priorities, discover candidates the system hides from them, and plug into a growing network of movements, journalists, and leaders building outside the two-party box. We’re building people-power, proving demand, and earning the trust to launch what comes next.
Phase 2 is the endgame: Digital Democracy. A citizen-owned system with Politician Report Cards, candidate matchmaking tools, and a level playing field where the best leaders rise, not just the best-funded ones.
This is how we take democracy back: by building new infrastructure where better choices are actually possible.
Our structure matters. FiNC is building something akin to a cooperative-style nonprofit where team members aren’t just employees; they’re partners and co-architects in a mission to rebuild democracy.
If you’re ready to help design the civic infrastructure America never got, and to build with citizens, not gatekeepers, we invite you to step in.
IMPORTANT: This involves DELAYED COMPENSATION – Please read carefully
To maintain our independence and avoid conflicts of interest, we are not accepting investors or financing that comes with strings attached. Instead, we are Crowd-Starting FiNC—building it together from the ground up.
We’re asking team members to contribute 15-20 hours per week during this phase, with all time tracked and paid retroactively once we become fully operational.
This model only works if you see it as a short-term investment for long-term rewards. Everyone who joins is a partner, receiving an ownership stake in FiNC. Our structure is similar to a Nonprofit Cooperative, moving beyond the traditional “employee vs employer” dynamic into something more collaborative and forward-thinking.
This model filters for people who believe in the mission deeply enough to build alongside us. It’s not for everyone, and that’s okay.
Culture and Employment
A New Kind of Organization for a New Kind of Democracy
- Neurodiversity and diversity-of-thought are strengths, not obstacles
- Servant leadership, dynamic team structures, and shared ownership
- Purpose over profits, value over hours, and respect for work-life balance
- We reward authenticity, passion, and commitment—not conformity
- We support individual weaknesses to enhance collective strengths
- Continuous role assessments, long-term growth opportunities, and real career sustainability
From your first 2-way interview, you will see (and feel) how radically different we are.
What You’d Actually Be Building
Right now, FiNC is standing up the Digital Politics Hub: the action center where citizens connect with candidates who actually want to represent them. Nevada is our pilot state. Candidates need visibility. Citizens need to see who’s out there. Nobody has built that bridge. That’s what you’re building.
Your first projects:
- Candidate Portal: A public directory where candidates create profiles, and citizens browse, filter, and compare them. Built on Softr + Airtable with candidate login, profile editing, and public-facing pages.
- Citizen Priority System: Surveys and polls that capture what citizens care about, with aggregated dashboards candidates can actually use.
- District Lookup Integration: Connecting the Google Civic Information and FEC APIs so citizens can find candidates in their specific district.
- Hub Improvements: Ongoing iteration on the Digital Politics Hub based on citizen feedback and team needs.
Down the road, you’d help scope and build early features of Digital Democracy: Politician Report Cards, the Candidate Matchmaker, and the tools that make the full vision real.
Who Thrives in This Role
This is where we need to be honest with you.
We’ve worked with developers before. The pattern that doesn’t work here: someone who sees the tech as the mission. At FiNC, the tech is important, but it serves the human side. Our energy goes into outreach, relationships, trust-building, and earning citizen buy-in. The tech makes that work scalable.
You’ll thrive here if you:
- Get energized by why something is being built, not just how
- Can sit in a conversation about what a frustrated voter needs, and walk away thinking about features
- Are comfortable with “good enough for now, we’ll improve it” instead of “let me architect the perfect system first”
- Work well with non-technical teammates and translate between their ideas and what’s buildable
- Have opinions about user experience that come from empathy, not just design patterns
- Are socially engaged (we don’t need an extrovert, but we need someone who genuinely connects with people and cares about how they experience things)
You’ll struggle here if you:
- Default to “the tech should drive the strategy”
- Need a detailed spec before you can start building
- Find it frustrating to work with people who don’t speak your technical language
- See civic tech as a resume line rather than something you’d do even if nobody was watching
What You Need to Know
Must-haves:
- Solid experience with Airtable (formulas, automations, relational tables, interfaces)
- Ability to build functional pages and user flows in Softr or a similar no-code platform
- Comfort using AI coding tools (Claude Code, Cursor, or similar) to write and debug code when no-code hits its limits
- Enough coding literacy to read, modify, and troubleshoot JavaScript, APIs, and embeds
- Experience working with APIs (specifically: you’ll be integrating the Google Civic Information API early on)
Nice-to-haves:
- Familiarity with WordPress (our main site runs on WordPress + Cloudways)
- Any background in civic tech, nonprofit tech, or mission-driven organizations
- Design sense; you don’t need to be a designer, but caring about how things look and feel matters here