Lead Site Reliability Engineer

Manchester
3 weeks ago
Create job alert

Lead Site Reliability Engineer

This is a rare opportunity to join at the start of something big.

£90,000 - £105,000 + Excellent benefits

Location - Manchester/Hybrid

The excitement of a startup, with the security of a big, established company.

We are helping a large UK-owned software group to build and scale a world-class, AI-first engineering organisation in Manchester. They have very ambitious plans and the budget to make it happen.

The Lead Site Reliability Engineer plays a critical role in ensuring the AI-driven, cloud-native platform is reliable, observable, secure, and able to scale with the organisation’s growth. As they adopt intelligent agents, autonomous workflows, and increasingly complex distributed systems, the SRE ensures that resilience, performance, and operational excellence are built into everything they deliver. By partnering closely with Engineers, Architects, and the Engineering Manager, the SRE defines the patterns, tooling, and automation that enable fast, safe, and repeatable deployments.

This role safeguards the production environment, drives continuous improvement across

CI/CD and observability, and establishes the reliability practices that empower autonomous squads to move quickly without compromising stability. The SRE is essential to maintaining customer trust, supporting AI-first innovation, and ensuring the platform remains robust, secure, and highly available at scale.

What we’re looking for:

  • Proven experience in AWS and Azure cloud environments

  • Strong background in CI/CD tools (e.g., Azure DevOps, Pipelines, GitHub Actions, Jenkins).

  • Expertise in monitoring and observability platforms (e.g., Prometheus, Grafana, Datadog).

  • Proficiency in scripting and automation (Python, Bash, PowerShell).

  • Familiarity with containerisation and orchestration (Docker, Kubernetes).

  • Solid understanding of networking, security, and cost optimisation in cloud environments.

  • Knowledge of cybersecurity principles, secure coding practices, and compliance frameworks.

    Benefits include an excellent benefits package, with hybrid working in their central Manchester office.

    If you'd like to discuss further, please apply now

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Lead Data Engineering Consultant CGEMJP00330718

Lead Software Engineer

Network Installation Engineer (Cisco)

Network & Systems Engineer

Technical Infrastructure Manager

Head of IT

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

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

How Many Cyber Security Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Cyber Security Job?

If you are trying to build or move forward in a cyber security career, it can feel like the list of tools you are expected to know never ends. One job advert asks for SIEM platforms, another mentions penetration testing tools, another lists cloud security, threat intelligence platforms, endpoint detection, scripting languages and compliance frameworks. Scroll LinkedIn and it gets worse. Everyone seems to “know” dozens of tools, certifications and platforms. Here is the reality most cyber security hiring managers agree on: they are not hiring you because you know every tool. They are hiring you because you understand risk, can think like an attacker and a defender, follow process, communicate clearly and make good decisions under pressure. Tools matter — but only when they support those outcomes. So how many cyber security tools do you actually need to know to get a job? For most job seekers, the answer is far fewer than you think. This article explains what employers really expect, which tools are essential, which are role-specific and how to focus your learning so you look credible, not overwhelmed.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Cyber Security Job Applications (UK Guide)

If you want to stand out in the highly competitive world of cyber security job applications, you need to understand what hiring managers look for before they even finish reading a CV. Cyber security hiring managers scan applications quickly and with specific priorities in mind. They assess not just your technical ability, but your judgement, professionalism, clarity, risk awareness and evidence of impact. This guide explains what hiring managers look for first in cyber security applications across roles like Security Analyst, Security Engineer, Penetration Tester, Incident Responder, Security Architect, Governance Risk and Compliance specialists and Cloud Security positions. Use this as a practical, step-by-step checklist to sharpen your CV, LinkedIn profile, cover letter and portfolio before you apply on www.cybersecurityjobs.tech .

The Skills Gap in Cyber Security Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Cyber security has become one of the most critical disciplines in the modern economy. From protecting financial systems and healthcare data to securing national infrastructure, cloud platforms and supply chains, cyber security professionals now sit at the frontline of digital trust. Demand for cyber security talent in the UK has surged. Job vacancies remain high, salaries continue to rise, and organisations across every sector report difficulty hiring skilled professionals. Yet despite this demand, many graduates struggle to break into cyber security roles and employers consistently report that candidates are not job-ready. The problem is not intelligence, ambition or academic effort. It is a persistent and widening skills gap between university education and real-world cyber security work. This article explores that gap in depth: what universities teach well, what they routinely miss, why the gap exists, what employers actually want, and how jobseekers can bridge the divide to build sustainable careers in cyber security.