DevSecOps Engineer

Boss Professional Services
High Wycombe, United Kingdom
3 weeks ago
£55,000 – £62,000 pa

Salary

£55,000 – £62,000 pa

Job Type
Permanent
Work Pattern
Full-time
Work Location
On-site
Seniority
Senior
Education
Degree
Posted
7 May 2026 (3 weeks ago)

DevSecOps Engineer

  • Department: IT Infrastructure
  • Location: Beaconsfield
  • Reporting to: Head of IT

The DevSecOps Engineer will play a key leadership role in our team as we automate our multiple development pipelines that flow into Docker and Kubernetes on-premise infrastructure. Part of this role will be to migrate our existing Docker Containers to Kubernetes.

This DevSecOps Engineer will implement a Secure Software Development Lifecycle and will need to understand software development (Dev), but enjoy all the things necessary for improving deploying, monitoring, and operating production services (Ops) whilst ensuring that secure development practices are followed (Sec).

Essential:

  • Hands on experience using the Kubernetes platform.
  • Provide thought and subject matter leadership in DevSecOps.
  • Infrastructure, advising Development Managers in structuring and sizing their plans
  • Raising red flags on faulty models or assumptions to prevent misguided implementation.
  • Ability to automate release deployments across all stacks.
  • Strong experience with release pipelines, including blue/ green deployments.
  • Develop effective tooling to accelerate deploy and release management.
  • Optimize deployments for scalability, efficiency and security.
  • Develop infrastructure standards and best practices with a proclivity towards automation.
  • Build, manage and upgrade Kubernetes clusters
  • Experience building Kubernetes capabilities, integrations and security requirements
  • Python or Go
  • Lead the design, implementation, and maintenance of CI/CD pipelines
  • Develop and maintain automation scripts for system administration and operational tasks
  • Monitor system performance, troubleshoot issues, and implement solutions to enhance reliability and scalability.
  • Experience with CI/CD tools such as Jenkins, GitLab CI, or Argo CD.
  • Work closely with the Head of IT, C.I.S.O. and Directors to develop, implement and coordinate systems and procedures.
  • Maintain the configuration, identifying dependencies, potential conflicts, document the process and track a schedule of the deployments for each environment.
  • Manage the configuration and up-time of all environments and microservices.
  • Experience on managing vulnerability resolution on key environments.
  • Design, implement, and maintain highly available and secure infrastructures.
  • Build and implement monitoring and logging services.
  • Carry out threat modelling and implement secure coding practices
  • Ensure security standards are met using automated testing on build pipelines.
  • Design and implement a DR/ remote service strategy.
  • Work with the Infrastructure team for the implementation of ITIL concepts and tools.
  • Remain current on broad technology infrastructure changes in the industry and how they may assist with driving down costs or increasing competitive advantage.

Desirable experience for the DevSecOps Engineer:

  • Continually manage all cloud assets to ensure right-sized and minimize sprawl.
  • Experience of Gitlab
  • Experience of AWS Cloud
  • Relevant technical certifications

Related Jobs

View all jobs

DevSecOps Engineer

REVYBE IT RECRUITMENT LIMITED M15An, M1 5AN, United Kingdom
£70,000 – £80,000 pa Hybrid

DevSecOps Engineer

Boss Professional Services High Wycombe, United Kingdom
£55,000 – £62,000 pa On-site

DevSecOps Engineer

Oscar Technology Stevenage, United Kingdom
£40,000 – £50,000 pa Hybrid Clearance Required

DevSecOps Engineer

Optamor Gl34Aa, GL3 4AA, United Kingdom
£35,000 – £86,000 pa On-site Clearance Required

DevSecOps Engineer

Sanderson Hampshire, United Kingdom
£40,000 – £80,000 pa On-site Clearance Required

DevSecOps Consultant

Talent Smart Orchard Square, South Yorkshire, United Kingdom
£650 – £675 pd

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Where to Advertise Cyber Security Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Where to advertise cyber security jobs UK in 2026: the specialist boards, communities and channels that reach offensive, defensive and GRC security talent. The candidate pool is small, heavily vetted and in high demand across government, financial services, critical national infrastructure and the private sector simultaneously. Many of the strongest candidates hold active security clearances, are not actively job-searching through general platforms, and move primarily through specialist networks and trusted referrals. General job boards reach a broad audience but lack the specificity that security professionals expect. Specialist platforms, government-affiliated channels and cleared candidate networks each serve a different part of the market. This guide, published by CybersecurityJobs.tech, covers where to advertise cyber security roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about hiring across different role types.

Cyber Security Jobs UK 2026: What to Expect Over the Next 3 Years

Cyber Security Jobs UK 2026: roles, salaries and the threat intelligence, cloud security and zero-trust hiring trends shaping UK cyber careers. Cyber security is one of the few sectors where demand for talent has never once dipped. Every major technological shift of the past decade — cloud migration, remote working, AI adoption, the proliferation of connected devices — has expanded the attack surface that security professionals are expected to defend. And every expansion of that attack surface has generated more jobs. But the cyber security jobs market of 2026 is not simply a larger version of what it was three years ago. It is a structurally different market. The threats have evolved, the technologies used to combat them have changed, the regulatory environment has tightened considerably, and the roles being created reflect all of that. A job seeker who understands only the cyber security landscape of 2023 is already working with an outdated map. The candidates who will thrive over the next three years are those who understand where the sector is heading — which specialisms are attracting the most investment, which technologies are reshaping defensive and offensive security practice, and how the definition of a cyber security professional is broadening well beyond the traditional image of a network defender in a SOC. This article breaks down what the UK cyber security jobs market is likely to look like through to 2028 — covering the titles emerging right now, the technologies driving employer demand, the skills that will matter most, and how to position your career ahead of the curve.