EcoG builds charge controllers and software for DC charging stations, with engineering concentrated on moving from prototype to production and refactoring core product. The stack—C/C++, Rust, Linux, FreeRTOS, OCPP, ISO 15118—reveals hardware-firmware integration work typical of embedded systems. Hiring is engineering-heavy and senior-skewed (4 of 10 roles), suggesting they're scaling depth in a phase where execution risk is high: prototype-to-production, design reviews, testing automation, and tech-debt reduction all appear as active projects.
EcoG designs and manufactures DC charging controllers and reference designs for electric-vehicle charging networks. Founded in 2017 and headquartered in Munich, the company sells to EV charging operators and OEMs seeking to accelerate product deployment. The business combines hardware (charge controllers), firmware (OCPP/ISO 15118 protocol stacks), and cloud software for fleet management and financial reporting. Current operational priorities include moving prototype designs into production, reducing maintenance burden, and automating financial processes—all indicators of a company scaling from early-stage to commercial operations.
EcoG's stack centers on C/C++ and Rust for firmware, Linux and FreeRTOS for real-time control, OCPP and ISO 15118 for charging protocol compliance, SAP for enterprise resource planning, and Teamcenter for product lifecycle management.
Yes. Engineering roles make up 4 of 10 active positions. Hiring is concentrated in Germany, with a senior-skewed mix (4 senior, 2 mid-level roles across all departments).
Munich, Bavaria, Germany. The company was founded in 2017 and remains privately held with 51–200 employees.
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