Full Stack Developer - C# - Cambridgeshire

Cambridge
4 days ago
Create job alert

C# Full Stack Developer - Hybrid Role - Cambridgeshire - Up to £65,000

Mploy Group is supporting a growing digital business based in Cambridgeshire that continues to invest in it's clients e-commerce platforms offering world class solutions and products. We’re looking for a Full Stack Developer with strong experience across C#/.NET on the backend and React on the frontend, to help develop and scale a customer-facing websites that sell products online.

This is an opportunity to work on a live, revenue-generating platforms where performance, usability, and reliability directly impact the business.

The Role

You’ll contribute across the full development lifecycle, working on both backend services and frontend user experiences.

Key responsibilities include:



Developing and maintaining backend services and APIs using C# / .NET

*

Building responsive, user-focused interfaces using React

*

Enhancing core e-commerce functionality (product catalogues, checkout, payments, integrations)

*

Collaborating closely with product, commercial, and engineering teams

*

Improving performance, security, and scalability

*

Supporting existing systems while shaping future platform development

*

Participating in code reviews and technical discussions

About You

You’ll be a well-rounded developer with experience working on transactional, customer-facing platforms.

Essential experience:

*

Commercial experience with C# / .NET

*

Strong frontend experience using React

*

Solid understanding of JavaScript / TypeScript

*

Experience building and consuming APIs

*

Good database and application performance knowledge

Desirable experience:

*

Experience in e-commerce environments

*

Exposure to payment gateways and third-party integrations

*

Cloud experience (Azure or AWS)

*

Familiarity with modern development practices (CI/CD, testing, agile)

What’s on Offer

*

Salary up to £65,000

*

Hybrid working – 2 days per week in the Cambridgeshire offices

*

Work on a high-impact, customer-facing e-commerce platforms

*

Collaborative and supportive engineering environment

*

Long-term technical and career progression

Please apply at your earliest convenience to be considered for this role

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Full Stack Developer

Full Stack Developer

Full Stack Developer

Full Stack Developer - C#, .NET, Angular

Full-Stack Developer - Inside IR35 - Remote

Full Stack Developer - Symfony - Hybrid - Liverpool

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

How to Write a Cloud Computing Job Ad That Attracts the Right People

Cloud computing underpins much of the UK’s digital economy. From startups and scale-ups to enterprise organisations and the public sector, cloud platforms enable everything from data analytics and AI to cybersecurity, DevOps and digital services. Yet despite high demand for cloud skills, many employers struggle to attract the right candidates. Cloud job adverts are often flooded with unsuitable applications, while experienced cloud engineers, architects and platform specialists quietly pass them by. In most cases, the problem is not the shortage of cloud talent — it is the quality and clarity of the job advert. Cloud professionals are pragmatic, technically experienced and highly selective. A poorly written job ad signals confusion, unrealistic expectations or a lack of cloud maturity. A well-written one signals credibility, good engineering culture and long-term thinking. This guide explains how to write a cloud computing job ad that attracts the right people, improves applicant quality and strengthens your employer brand.

Maths for Cloud Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

If you are applying for cloud computing jobs in the UK you might have noticed something frustrating: job descriptions rarely ask for “maths” directly yet interviews often drift into capacity, performance, reliability, cost or security trade-offs that are maths in practice. The good news is you do not need degree-level theory to be job-ready. For most roles like Cloud Engineer, DevOps Engineer, Platform Engineer, SRE, Cloud Architect, FinOps Analyst or Cloud Security Engineer you keep coming back to a small set of practical skills: Units, rates & back-of-the-envelope estimation (requests per second, throughput, latency, storage growth) Statistics for reliability & observability (percentiles, error rates, SLOs, error budgets) Capacity planning & queueing intuition (utilisation, saturation, Little’s Law) Cost modelling & optimisation (right-sizing, break-even thinking, cost per transaction) Trade-off reasoning under constraints (performance vs cost vs reliability) This guide explains exactly what to learn plus a 6-week plan & portfolio projects you can publish to prove it.

Neurodiversity in Cloud Computing Careers: Turning Different Thinking into a Superpower

Cloud computing sits at the heart of modern tech. Almost every digital product runs on someone’s cloud platform – from banking apps & streaming services to AI tools & online shops. Behind those platforms are teams of cloud engineers, architects, SREs, security specialists & more. These roles demand problem-solvers who can think in systems, spot patterns, stay calm under pressure & imagine better ways to build & run infrastructure. That makes cloud computing a natural fit for many neurodivergent people – including those with ADHD, autism & dyslexia. If you are neurodivergent & considering a cloud career, you might have heard messages like “you’re too distracted for engineering”, “too literal for stakeholder work” or “too disorganised for operations”. In reality, many traits that come with ADHD, autism & dyslexia are exactly what cloud teams need. This guide is written for cloud computing job seekers in the UK. We will cover: What neurodiversity means in a cloud context How ADHD, autism & dyslexia strengths map to cloud roles Practical workplace adjustments you can ask for under UK law How to talk about neurodivergence in applications & interviews By the end, you should have a clearer sense of where you might thrive in cloud computing – & how to turn “different thinking” into a professional superpower.