Jobs on TAL
All jobsRemoteEngineeringb2b saas5+ yearsservicenow
RemoteSeniorb2b saas

ServiceNow UI Builder Engineer

Agility ITmulti, IndiaPosted 19 May 2026

Agility IT is hiring a senior ServiceNow UI Builder Engineer to develop modern user experiences for a leading telecom enterprise. The role focuses on designing custom workspaces and portals using ServiceNow's Next Experience framework and various modules including TMT, CSM, and ITSM. Candidates must demonstrate deep proficiency in ServiceNow development, including UI Builder, JavaScript, and Glide APIs. This is a 12-month full-time remote contract opportunity requiring strong stakeholder management skills.

Matched by TAL

50k new jobs listed every day. Install TAL to find more jobs like this.

Install TAL

Experience

5+ years

Function

Engineering

Work mode

Remote, India

Company

Tier 2

What you will work on

Agility IT is hiring a senior ServiceNow UI Builder Engineer to develop modern user experiences for a leading telecom enterprise. The role focuses on designing custom workspaces and portals using ServiceNow's Next Experience framework and various modules including TMT, CSM, and ITSM. Candidates must demonstrate deep proficiency in ServiceNow development, including UI Builder, JavaScript, and Glide APIs. This is a 12-month full-time remote contract opportunity requiring strong stakeholder management skills.

TAL's take

Quality 58/1005/5 clarityTier 2 company

Solid mid-tier role with defined tech stack and domain expertise requirements, but lacks top-tier company brand prestige.

The JD provides a very clear, specific set of technical requirements and responsibilities mapped to the ServiceNow platform.

Must haves

  • 5+ years of ServiceNow development experience
  • 2+ years of hands-on experience with ServiceNow UI Builder
  • Strong knowledge of ServiceNow Next Experience UI Framework
  • Experience with TMT, FSM, CSM, and ITSM modules
  • Strong proficiency in HTML, CSS, JavaScript, AngularJS, and Glide APIs

Tools and skills

servicenowui buildernext experience ui frameworktmtfsmcsmitsmhtmlcssjavascriptangularjsglide apisapp engine studioflow designerintegration hub

Nice to have: genai, predictive analytics, sdlc, agile, scrum, ci/cd.

About the company

unfamiliar company, default mid-tier

Posts mentioning Agility IT

Having a plan B is for people who don't trust their ability to learn, build, and adapt.

Plan B feels safe. Until you realize it’s the reason Plan A failed. Growth only happens when failure isn’t an option. When you’re all in. When there’s nothing left to catch you but your own determination. That’s when you find out who you really are.

Career Advice74

the dark reality of campus placements at top bschools...

As I look back on my time at IIM, I am sad that it did not live up to my expectations. The name IIM carries weight, still I feel only IIM A/B/C should be called IIMs. The new and baby IIMs are dark black spots on the brand of IIMs. Even L/I/K are like small puppies in front of ABC. It’s hard to shake off the feeling that the legacy of the institute is being tarnished. Rankings are shit. IIM A spends heavily on media management, and so nobody will ever rank it No 2, no matter what the other two do. It’s disheartening to see how perception trumps reality in this world. More than half of the candidates come through reservation at 70-80 percentile. They are dumb and still get placed at an average package of general candidates. The notion of meritocracy in B-Schools and corporates is a myth. It’s a conversation we have behind closed doors, a secret that hangs in the air. We hate reserved category people but we have to pretend to be not knowing about its existence on campus. During admissions and placements, girls with assets are chosen over boys with brains. The priorities seem misplaced. Nobody cares about diversity; it’s a marketing gimmick to attract recruiters by showing photos of hot girls. It’s a harsh reality that many refuse to see. The academic environment is disappointing. Most Professors are plain stupid. Good Profs teach abroad, not in India. Practical learning is a lie sold to dumb HRs in a fancy package. It often feels like the curriculum is designed for a donkey and not a horse. Every year, every IIM will have 30–40 new recruiters because the people who get reserved category shit in the last placement year never recruit after seeing their performance till a new dumb HR replaces that old idiot in the company. It’s a cycle that perpetuates itself, with students doing anything for placements. Anything. Trust a snake, not a placement coordinator. These individuals are more concerned about securing the best jobs for themselves, their friends, and their girlfriends. Even professors are afraid of them. International exchange is a waste of time and money. Unless you’re rich enough to afford a three-month holiday and pretend to have gained global exposure while traveling and boozing, it’s hardly worth it. Cases and curriculum are as bad as it can be. Recruiters only care about CVs. The most troubling lesson learned at IIM is the ability to lie, cheat, and deceive people while boasting about your ethics and values. This is the only life skill that one learns, and it’s the only skill needed to become a CEO or a minister. Almost everyone has two dozen fake CV points, especially exaggerated achievements, fake work-ex, and extracurricular activities. The more you lie, the better the placements, because HRs are dumb. If IIMs stop giving placements, not even a single person would apply. The truth is, it’s not about learning; it’s about the job at the end of it.

Business Roles519

[Rant] Most Software Engineers are Grossly Overpaid...

Let's face it. Indian tech ecosystem is living in a bubble. A big overinflated bubble of ridiculous salaries and perks. And it's about time someone popped it. Here's the cold, hard truth: the vast majority of you are not nearly as valuable or irreplaceable as you think you are. You're not solving world hunger or curing cancer. You're mostly just gluing libraries together and calling yourself an "engineer." Here's what my friend in the US was telling me: 1. Your skills are becoming commoditized. With the rise of no-code/low-code platforms and AI code generation, the bar for entry is getting lower every day. Soon, a trained monkey could do what most of us do. 2. You're not special. Sorry to burst your bubble, but knowing how to center a div or implement a binary search doesn't make you a genius. It just means you paid attention in your CS classes or watched Abdul Bari YouTube tutorials. 3. The value you create is questionable. How many of you are working on a payment aggregator, food tech or a slightly different shade of AI wrapper? Are you really making the world a better place, or just boosting the pockets of VCs? 4. You are probably terrible at estimating your own worth. Just because some FAANG companies are willing to throw insane amount of money at you doesn't mean you're actually worth it. It's a game of musical chairs, and the music's about to stop. 5. Your ego is out of control. The "100x developer" mentality has gone to your head. You demand ridiculous perks, flexible hours, and the ability to work in your stupid shorts, all while looking down on other professions. It's time for a reality check. You need to humble ourselves. Does it make sense to you? Try not to cry on your mechanical keyboard while typing your response.

Software Engineers9643