Network Engineer

F5 F5 · Enterprise · Seattle, WA +3

Seeking a Senior Network Engineer to manage and build reliable, scalable network services across global and regulated (FedRAMP) environments. Responsibilities include day-to-day operations, incident response, engineering routing architectures, developing automation, and ensuring network security and compliance within data centers and cloud platforms.

What you'd actually do

  1. Engineer, build, operate, and deliver network solutions for global data centers, cloud platforms, FedRAMP-authorized environments, build environments, and product connectivity needs.
  2. Ensure connectivity, availability, and performance across multi-region data centers, backbone sites, cloud platforms, and regulated FedRAMP environments using proactive monitoring, telemetry, and lifecycle management practices.
  3. Engineer enhancements, new capabilities, and service-driven connectivity features supporting product, platform evolution, and FedRAMP boundary services.
  4. Translate product, regulatory, and platform requirements into network designs that meet FedRAMP architectural and security expectations with clear timelines and dependencies.
  5. Create and maintain high-quality runbooks, architectural diagrams, and troubleshooting guides, including FedRAMP boundary diagrams and network control documentation.

Skills

Required

  • Network Engineering
  • BGP
  • OSPF
  • Python
  • Ansible/AWX
  • CI/CD
  • AWS
  • Azure
  • GCP
  • Direct Connect
  • ExpressRoute
  • VPN
  • Transit Gateway
  • Virtual WAN
  • Network Segmentation
  • Troubleshooting
  • Incident Response
  • Automation

Nice to have

  • collaboration
  • communication
  • mentorship

What the JD emphasized

  • regulated and compliant FedRAMP-authorized platforms
  • FedRAMP environments
  • secure network segmentation
  • FedRAMP configuration baselines
  • regulated FedRAMP environments
  • FedRAMP continuous monitoring requirements
  • FedRAMP-relevant incident handling
  • FedRAMP boundary services
  • least privilege
  • segmentation
  • encryption-in-transit
  • logging
  • configuration compliance
  • FedRAMP architectural and security expectations
  • FedRAMP eligibility
  • FedRAMP boundary diagrams