Find DevOps engineer, SRE, cloud architect, and infrastructure roles. If you live and breathe CI/CD pipelines, Kubernetes, Terraform, and cloud platforms, these opportunities are for you.
24 open positions
We list DevOps Engineer, Site Reliability Engineer (SRE), Cloud Architect, Platform Engineer, and Infrastructure Engineer roles.
AWS leads in demand, followed by Google Cloud (GCP) and Microsoft Azure. Multi-cloud experience is increasingly valued.
DevOps engineers typically earn $100k–$170k, with senior SREs and cloud architects earning $170k–$250k+.
DevOps is a culture and set of practices that bridges development and operations — automating deployments, improving collaboration, and reducing release cycles. SRE (Site Reliability Engineering), coined by Google, applies software engineering principles to operations, focusing specifically on reliability, uptime, and incident management. SRE is often seen as a more rigorous, engineering-heavy implementation of DevOps principles.
Core DevOps toolchain includes: Docker and Kubernetes for containerization/orchestration, Terraform or Pulumi for infrastructure-as-code, GitHub Actions, Jenkins, or CircleCI for CI/CD, Prometheus and Grafana for monitoring, the ELK stack (Elasticsearch, Logstash, Kibana) for logging, and Ansible or Chef for configuration management.
The AWS Certified Solutions Architect (Associate and Professional) is the gold standard. For Kubernetes, the CKA (Certified Kubernetes Administrator) and CKAD (Certified Kubernetes Application Developer) are highly respected. Google Cloud Professional Cloud Architect and HashiCorp Terraform certifications are also very marketable.
Yes. DevOps and platform engineering are among the highest-paying and most in-demand tech roles. As organizations move more infrastructure to the cloud and adopt microservices architectures, skilled DevOps engineers and SREs are critical. The role is evolving toward 'platform engineering' — building internal developer platforms that abstract cloud complexity.
Start by learning Linux fundamentals, scripting (Bash and Python), and Git. Then learn Docker and Kubernetes, followed by a cloud provider (AWS free tier is great for practice). Get certified (AWS Cloud Practitioner → AWS Solutions Architect Associate). Build a homelab or cloud lab with Terraform. Contribute to open-source infrastructure projects. Target junior DevOps or cloud support roles to get your foot in the door.