Software Engineering Manager, Sdn Control, Data Center Networks

Google Google · Big Tech · Sunnyvale, CA +1

Software Engineering Manager for SDN Control within Google's Data Center Networks team. This role involves leading a team of software engineers to develop and manage the Orion SDN infrastructure, focusing on innovation in convergence, capacity, security, and low-latency performance for Google's global network. The position requires technical leadership, people management, and strategic planning for large-scale distributed systems.

What you'd actually do

  1. Lead a team software engineers responsible for developing the SDN framework, applications and tools to enable various networking innovations and deployments at scale.
  2. Collaborate across Networking Infrastructure and Cloud with product managers, technical program managers, and other software engineer managers on applications built for the Google data center.
  3. Define a goal and long-term strategy for the team, identifying, recommending, and executing improvements to SDN Infrastructure.
  4. Drive all aspects of development including requirements definition, design, implementation, unit testing, and integration, building flexible technology to deliver highly-available, easily-evolvable networking infrastructure, while upholding high standards in Product Excellence and developing infrastructure to support large scale system operations.
  5. Mentor individual engineers focusing on alignment of long-term career goals to project priorities and business objectives.

Skills

Required

  • software development
  • large-scale infrastructure
  • distributed systems
  • networks
  • compute technologies
  • hardware architecture
  • technical leadership
  • people management
  • team leadership

Nice to have

  • Master's degree or PhD in Computer Science or related technical field
  • complex, matrixed organization
  • distributed, microservices based software development
  • Formal Methods/Verification
  • SDN match-action forwarding paradigm (e.g. OpenFlow or P4)