Strategic Operations Lead - Credit and Lending

Other Jobs To Apply

No other job posts for this day.

Mercury is building Mercury Bank, N.A., a proposed nationally chartered bank focused on serving ambitious businesses. Credit and lending are central to that mission, and as we migrate our charge card and term loan products to the Bank's own balance sheet and build the next generation of lending infrastructure, we need someone who can hold the full program together.<br><br>The Sr. Technical Program Manager for Credit and Lending will own end-to-end delivery of the technology programs that power Mercury's charge card, term loan, and adjacent credit products. You will be the connective tissue between Engineering, Product, Risk, Compliance, Treasury, and Operations: setting strategy for how these programs run, surfacing tradeoffs that unblock leaders, sequencing the critical path, and ensuring that what ships is audit-ready from day one.<br><br>We are looking for someone who has operated at this level before, in a regulated environment, at scale, with real accountability for outcomes.<br><br><em>*Mercury is a fintech company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided through Choice Financial Group and Column N.A., Members FDIC.<br><br></em><strong>What you'll do:<br><br></strong>Program ownership<br><br><ul><li>Own the integrated program plan across all active credit and lending workstreams, covering milestones, dependencies, and critical paths across Engineering, Product, Risk, Compliance, Treasury, and Operations.</li><li>Proactively manage sequencing, resourcing tradeoffs, and escalations. When initiatives are off-track, you identify it first and bring a recommended path forward.</li><li>Ensure Compliance, Treasury, and Operations readiness lands alongside product and regulatory milestones </li><li>Drive incident learnings back into design, test coverage, and runbooks so each issue improves the underlying system, not just fixes the symptom.<br><br></li></ul>Governance and decision-making<br><br><ul><li>Keep a single source of truth for status, decisions, risks, and owners. Maintain a living RAID log with clear owners and impact assessments.</li><li>Facilitate structured decision-making by surfacing options and tradeoffs to leaders before problems escalate. </li><li>Build and improve the operating systems that drive credit and lending product decisions: planning cycles, reviews, decision frameworks, launch readiness.<br><br></li></ul>Communication and influence<br><br><ul><li>Produce concise, predictable updates calibrated to the audience. </li><li>Synthesize complex cross-functional information into recommendations that help executives decide and move. </li><li>Produce documentation of program objectives, architecture decisions, and operational impacts that onboards new team members without requiring a meeting to explain it.</li><li>Function as a trusted thought partner to engineering leads, product managers, and senior leadership.<br><br></li></ul>Execution and improvement<br><br><ul><li>Identify inefficiencies and eliminate them through automation, AI tooling, or process redesign.</li><li>Lead technical retrospectives and post-mortems, ensuring learnings are systematized rather than forgotten.<br><br></li></ul><strong>What we're looking for:<br><br></strong><strong>Experience<br><br></strong><ul><li>10+ years of program management or technical program management in a high-growth or regulated environment.</li><li>Direct experience in financial services, fintech, or credit infrastructure. Compliance, audit, reporting and risk management obligations are familiar territory.</li><li>Track record of operating at the department or business level, owning programs with multiple concurrent workstreams and cross-functional accountability.</li><li>Proven ability to communicate with and influence executive stakeholders, in writing and in high-stakes meetings, without a senior manager to translate.</li><li>Bonus: Familiarity with the lending tooling ecosystem such as loan origination, credit risk management and lending management systems.<br><br></li></ul>How you work<br><br><ul><li>Product-first. You evaluate everything through: what is the user problem, what is the fastest path to learning, what actually moves the needle.</li><li>AI-native. You use AI tools to do your actual work. You have built workflows or tooling that changed how your team operates. When you see a repetitive process, you automate it.</li><li>Comfortable in ambiguity. You build structure where there is none. </li><li>Systems thinker. You see dependencies, second-order effects, and points of failure before they surface, and you build programs that account for them.</li><li>Energized by building and operating. You do your best work designing the system and running it well once it is built.<br><br></li></ul>What you bring<br><br><ul><li>Technical fluency. You can understand and challenge engineering decisions, identify technical risks early, and translate complexity for non-technical stakeholders.</li><li>Exceptional written and verbal communication. You write documentation that clarifies hard decisions and build frameworks teams actually adopt.</li><li>Commercial instincts. You understand the financial dynamics of a lending business well enough to evaluate tradeoffs with authority.</li><li>High emotional intelligence. You build trust quickly across engineering, product, risk, and executive stakeholders. You navigate complex interpersonal situations without losing credibility or momentum.<br><br></li></ul>The total rewards package at Mercury includes base salary, equity (stock options/RSUs), and benefits.<br><br>Our salary and equity ranges are highly competitive within the SaaS and fintech industry and are updated regularly using the most reliable compensation survey data for our industry. New hire offers are made based on a candidate’s experience, expertise, geographic location, and internal pay equity relative to peers.<br><br>Our target new hire base salary ranges for this role are the following:<br><br><ul><li>US employees in New York City, Los Angeles, Seattle, or the San Francisco Bay Area: $163,000 - 203,800</li><li>US employees outside of the New York City, Los Angeles, Seattle, or the San Francisco Bay Area: $146,700 - 183,400</li><li>Canadian employees (any location): CAD 154,100 - 192,600<br><br></li></ul>Mercury values diversity & belonging and is proud to be an Equal Employment Opportunity employer. All individuals seeking employment at Mercury are considered without regard to race, color, religion, national origin, age, sex, marital status, ancestry, physical or mental disability, veteran status, gender identity, sexual orientation, or any other legally protected characteristic. We are committed to providing reasonable accommodations throughout the recruitment process for applicants with disabilities or special needs. If you need assistance, or an accommodation, please let your recruiter know once you are contacted about a role.<br><br>

Back to blog

Common Interview Questions And Answers

1. HOW DO YOU PLAN YOUR DAY?

This is what this question poses: When do you focus and start working seriously? What are the hours you work optimally? Are you a night owl? A morning bird? Remote teams can be made up of people working on different shifts and around the world, so you won't necessarily be stuck in the 9-5 schedule if it's not for you...

2. HOW DO YOU USE THE DIFFERENT COMMUNICATION TOOLS IN DIFFERENT SITUATIONS?

When you're working on a remote team, there's no way to chat in the hallway between meetings or catch up on the latest project during an office carpool. Therefore, virtual communication will be absolutely essential to get your work done...

3. WHAT IS "WORKING REMOTE" REALLY FOR YOU?

Many people want to work remotely because of the flexibility it allows. You can work anywhere and at any time of the day...

4. WHAT DO YOU NEED IN YOUR PHYSICAL WORKSPACE TO SUCCEED IN YOUR WORK?

With this question, companies are looking to see what equipment they may need to provide you with and to verify how aware you are of what remote working could mean for you physically and logistically...

5. HOW DO YOU PROCESS INFORMATION?

Several years ago, I was working in a team to plan a big event. My supervisor made us all work as a team before the big day. One of our activities has been to find out how each of us processes information...

6. HOW DO YOU MANAGE THE CALENDAR AND THE PROGRAM? WHICH APPLICATIONS / SYSTEM DO YOU USE?

Or you may receive even more specific questions, such as: What's on your calendar? Do you plan blocks of time to do certain types of work? Do you have an open calendar that everyone can see?...

7. HOW DO YOU ORGANIZE FILES, LINKS, AND TABS ON YOUR COMPUTER?

Just like your schedule, how you track files and other information is very important. After all, everything is digital!...

8. HOW TO PRIORITIZE WORK?

The day I watched Marie Forleo's film separating the important from the urgent, my life changed. Not all remote jobs start fast, but most of them are...

9. HOW DO YOU PREPARE FOR A MEETING AND PREPARE A MEETING? WHAT DO YOU SEE HAPPENING DURING THE MEETING?

Just as communication is essential when working remotely, so is organization. Because you won't have those opportunities in the elevator or a casual conversation in the lunchroom, you should take advantage of the little time you have in a video or phone conference...

10. HOW DO YOU USE TECHNOLOGY ON A DAILY BASIS, IN YOUR WORK AND FOR YOUR PLEASURE?

This is a great question because it shows your comfort level with technology, which is very important for a remote worker because you will be working with technology over time...