Senior Infrastructure as Code (IaC) Engineer

Other Jobs To Apply

About the position

Wells Fargo is seeking a skilled Senior Infrastructure as Code (IaC) Engineer to join our Modernization Services Engineering team. This role is ideal for an experienced engineer who understands infrastructure challenges and enjoys building automation that enables teams to move faster, safer, and with greater consistency. In this role, you will focus on implementing and evolving infrastructure automation solutions, contributing to reusable IaC modules, GitOps workflows, and platform services. You will collaborate with Lead Engineers and peers to deliver reliable, scalable infrastructure capabilities while continuing to grow your technical breadth and influence.

Responsibilities

  • Design, develop, and maintain reusable Infrastructure as Code (IaC) modules using tools such as Terraform, Pulumi, Ansible, or Crossplane
  • Implement GitOps-driven workflows to automate provisioning, deployment, and lifecycle management of cloud infrastructure
  • Contribute to self-service platform capabilities that enable developers to provision and manage infrastructure through APIs and tooling
  • Integrate infrastructure automation with Kubernetes and related ecosystem tools (e.g., ArgoCD, CI/CD pipelines)
  • Apply established infrastructure standards, patterns, and best practices to ensure consistency, security, and scalability
  • Participate in architecture and code reviews, providing thoughtful feedback and learning from peers
  • Collaborate with platform, security, and application teams to deliver infrastructure solutions aligned with engineering and business needs
  • Troubleshoot and resolve issues related to infrastructure automation, pipelines, and platform tooling
  • Continuously improve the reliability, performance, and maintainability of infrastructure code and workflows

Requirements

  • 4+ years of Technology Infrastructure Engineering and Solutions experience, or equivalent demonstrated through one or a combination of the following: work experience, training, military experience, education
  • 2+ years of experience designing, consuming, or integrating RESTful APIs as part of infrastructure automation with languages such as Go, C#, Java, or Python
  • 2+ years of experience with Infrastructure as Code tools such as Terraform, Pulumi, or Ansible
  • 2+ years of experience applying GitOps principles and working with tools such as ArgoCD or Flux
  • 1+ years of experience with Kubernetes and containerized workloads

Nice-to-haves

  • Exposure to Crossplane or other control plane abstraction technologies
  • Familiarity with CI/CD pipelines and developer tooling
  • Experience supporting cloud-native application platforms or platform engineering initiatives
  • Familiarity with observability tools such as Prometheus, Grafana, or ELK Stack
  • Understanding of security best practices in cloud and infrastructure automation contexts
  • A strong engineering mindset with attention to code quality, maintainability, and automation
Back to blog

Common Interview Questions And Answers

1. HOW DO YOU PLAN YOUR DAY?

This is what this question poses: When do you focus and start working seriously? What are the hours you work optimally? Are you a night owl? A morning bird? Remote teams can be made up of people working on different shifts and around the world, so you won't necessarily be stuck in the 9-5 schedule if it's not for you...

2. HOW DO YOU USE THE DIFFERENT COMMUNICATION TOOLS IN DIFFERENT SITUATIONS?

When you're working on a remote team, there's no way to chat in the hallway between meetings or catch up on the latest project during an office carpool. Therefore, virtual communication will be absolutely essential to get your work done...

3. WHAT IS "WORKING REMOTE" REALLY FOR YOU?

Many people want to work remotely because of the flexibility it allows. You can work anywhere and at any time of the day...

4. WHAT DO YOU NEED IN YOUR PHYSICAL WORKSPACE TO SUCCEED IN YOUR WORK?

With this question, companies are looking to see what equipment they may need to provide you with and to verify how aware you are of what remote working could mean for you physically and logistically...

5. HOW DO YOU PROCESS INFORMATION?

Several years ago, I was working in a team to plan a big event. My supervisor made us all work as a team before the big day. One of our activities has been to find out how each of us processes information...

6. HOW DO YOU MANAGE THE CALENDAR AND THE PROGRAM? WHICH APPLICATIONS / SYSTEM DO YOU USE?

Or you may receive even more specific questions, such as: What's on your calendar? Do you plan blocks of time to do certain types of work? Do you have an open calendar that everyone can see?...

7. HOW DO YOU ORGANIZE FILES, LINKS, AND TABS ON YOUR COMPUTER?

Just like your schedule, how you track files and other information is very important. After all, everything is digital!...

8. HOW TO PRIORITIZE WORK?

The day I watched Marie Forleo's film separating the important from the urgent, my life changed. Not all remote jobs start fast, but most of them are...

9. HOW DO YOU PREPARE FOR A MEETING AND PREPARE A MEETING? WHAT DO YOU SEE HAPPENING DURING THE MEETING?

Just as communication is essential when working remotely, so is organization. Because you won't have those opportunities in the elevator or a casual conversation in the lunchroom, you should take advantage of the little time you have in a video or phone conference...

10. HOW DO YOU USE TECHNOLOGY ON A DAILY BASIS, IN YOUR WORK AND FOR YOUR PLEASURE?

This is a great question because it shows your comfort level with technology, which is very important for a remote worker because you will be working with technology over time...