Test Analyst

London
1 day ago
Create job alert

Job title: Test Analyst - Identity and Access
Duration: Initial 3-6 Months

Location: London (hybrid)

Overview
The Test Analyst will support the delivery of high-quality Identity & Access Management solutions by designing, executing, and evidencing tests across multiple IAM workstreams, including Privileged Access and Remote Access. The role focuses on validating access rules, integrations, and user journeys, while supporting UAT and working alongside third-party delivery teams.

Key Responsibilities

Design and execute test cases and scenarios covering remote access,access provisioning, authentication, and privilege controls.
Support UAT preparation and execution, including test data setup, scenario walkthroughs, and defect support.
Work closely with third-party suppliers to review test evidence, reproduce defects, and confirm fixes.
Log, track, and retest defects, ensuring clear traceability and quality evidence.
Contribute to test documentation, test reports, and audit-ready evidence packs.
Identify gaps, risks, or inconsistencies in access behaviour and escalate appropriately.Essential Skills and Experience

Experience as a Test Analyst within IAM, security, or enterprise systems programmes.
Understanding of IAM principles, including logical access, and privileged access.
Experience with running UAT support, defect management, and collaboration with business users.
Strong attention to detail with a structured, evidence-driven testing approach.
Ability to work across multiple workstreams and priorities in a fast-paced delivery environment.
Clear communication skills, able to work with technical teams, vendors, and non-technical stakeholders.Desirable Skills

Working knowledge of logical access management principles, including authentication, authorisation, and secure access pathways
Understanding of network access concepts relevant to identity, such as corporate networks, remote access models, VPNs, and zero-trust approaches.
Experience or familiarity with Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) methods, including app-based, hardware-based, and risk-based authentication
Knowledge of Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) and secure remote working solutions, including how identity and access controls are enforced in virtual environments.
Awareness of Privileged Access Workstations (PAW) / Virtual PAW concepts and their role in protecting high-risk or administrative access.
Familiarity with hardware authentication devices such as security keys (e.g. U2F/FIDO2 keys, YubiKeys) and their integration into access flows

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Senior Analyst/Developer (Front & Back-End)

GRC Analyst

Test and Testability

Test and Testability Expert

Automation Test Engineer CGEMJP00325931

Lead Automation Test Architect

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 to Write a Cyber Security Job Ad That Attracts the Right People

Cyber security is now a board-level priority for organisations across the UK. From financial services and healthcare to critical infrastructure, SaaS platforms and the public sector, demand for skilled cyber security professionals continues to grow. Yet despite this demand, many employers struggle to attract the right candidates. Cyber security job adverts often generate large volumes of applications, but few are a genuine match. Meanwhile, experienced security engineers, analysts and architects quietly ignore adverts that feel vague, unrealistic or disconnected from real security work. In most cases, the problem is not a lack of talent — it is the quality of the job advert. Cyber security professionals are trained to assess risk, spot weaknesses and question assumptions. A poorly written job ad signals organisational immaturity and weak security culture. A well-written one signals seriousness, competence and trust. This guide explains how to write a cyber security job ad that attracts the right people, improves applicant quality and positions your organisation as a credible security employer.

Maths for Cyber Security Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

If you are applying for cyber security jobs in the UK it can feel like “real security people” must be brilliant at maths. The reality is simpler: most roles do not need degree-level pure maths. What they do need is confidence with a small set of practical topics that show up repeatedly in day-to-day work across SOC, incident response, cloud security, AppSec, threat detection, IAM & security engineering. This guide strips the maths down to what actually helps you get hired. It includes a 6-week learning plan plus portfolio projects you can publish to prove the skills. You will focus on: Number systems & bitwise thinking (binary, hex, bytes, XOR) Modular arithmetic basics (enough to understand how modern crypto “works”) Probability & statistics for detection, triage & risk Discrete maths for logic, sets, graphs & complexity Security maths habits: estimation, false positive control & evidence-led reporting You will not waste time on heavy theory that rarely appears in junior or mid-level cyber security roles.

Neurodiversity in Cyber Security Careers: Turning Different Thinking into a Superpower

Cyber security is all about thinking like an attacker, spotting unusual patterns, protecting systems & responding calmly when everything looks like it’s on fire. It’s a discipline built on curiosity, persistence & noticing things other people miss. That’s exactly why it can be such a good fit for many neurodivergent people. If you live with ADHD, autism or dyslexia, you may have been told your brain is “too distracted”, “too literal” or “too disorganised” for a security role. In reality, the traits that can make traditional office work tough often line up beautifully with cyber security work – from hyperfocus in incident response to meticulous analysis in threat hunting. This guide is written for cyber security job seekers in the UK. We’ll look at: What neurodiversity means in a cyber context How ADHD, autism & dyslexia strengths map to different security roles Practical workplace adjustments you can ask for under UK law How to talk about neurodivergence during applications & interviews By the end, you’ll have a clearer sense of where you might thrive in cyber security – & how to turn “different thinking” into a genuine superpower.