Esteban Araya

VP Of Engineering at Domo

Esteban Araya has a diverse and extensive work experience in the technology industry. Esteban started their career at Ancestry.com in 2005 as a Software Engineer, where they served as the Lead Integration Developer for the company's Genetic Genealogy Service. Esteban worked there until 2008.

After that, Esteban joined TradeStation Securities in 2008 as a Lead Software Engineer. In this role, they established patterns and practices for a team of 4 developers, reviewed code, trained other engineers, and wrote technical requirements for projects. Esteban collaborated closely with the Enterprise Architect to define and write back-end services for the Internal Applications team. Esteban served in this role until 2012.

From there, Esteban joined Domo, Inc. in 2012, where they held multiple positions. Esteban started as a Technical Lead & Manager, Development, and worked in this role until 2015. In 2015, they were promoted to the position of Director of Engineering and held this position until 2022. In 2018, they were further promoted to the role of VP of Engineering, Data Platform. Currently, Esteban holds the position of VP of Engineering at Domo, Inc., starting in November 2022.

Throughout their career, Esteban has demonstrated strong leadership skills and expertise in engineering, software development, and technical strategy.

Esteban Araya holds a Master of Science (M.S.) degree in Computer Science from Utah State University, which they completed between 2007 and 2009. Prior to that, they earned a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree in Electrical Engineering from Brigham Young University, where they studied from 2000 to 2005. In addition to their formal education, Esteban has obtained several certifications, including "Finance for Non-Finance Professionals" from Coursera Course Certificates in August 2020, "Machine Learning Foundations: A Case Study Approach" from the University of Washington through Coursera Course Certificates in January 2017, "R Programming" from Coursera in November 2014, and "Functional Programming Principles in Scala" from Coursera in November 2012.

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