System Engineer - Golang & GitHub (Inside IR35 Remote)

City of London
1 week ago
Create job alert

System Engineer - Inside IR35 - Remote - Golang

Key Information

Role: Senior Systems Engineer - GitHub Enterprise Tooling & Operations
Location: Fully remote (option to visit London office if preferred)
Rate: £525 - £550 per day (Inside IR35 - confirmed)
Contract Length: 6 months
Start Date: ASAP (cannot consider notice periods longer than 2 weeks)
Working Arrangements: Fully remote

Role Summary

This position sits within the Engineering Enablement function and focuses on designing, building, and managing core services for GitHub Enterprise at scale. You will automate repository lifecycle processes, enforce organisation-wide policies, and integrate GitHub with other enterprise systems.

The ideal engineer will be highly skilled in Go, experienced with large-scale GitHub Enterprise environments, and passionate about automation, infrastructure tooling, and emerging technologies such as Generative AI.

Skills & Experience Needed

🔥 Essential Skills (Must-Haves)

Golang / Programming

Golang (Go) is an absolute must - primary language for automation tooling

GitHub Enterprise

Deep hands-on experience with GitHub Enterprise (actual administration, not just usage)
Experience developing GitHub Apps, GitHub Actions, GitHub integrations
Strong experience with GitHub REST/GraphQL APIs
Automation for:
Org/repo provisioning
Repository lifecycle management
Policy & compliance enforcement

Cloud & Infrastructure

Strong understanding of Terraform (more important initially than Kubernetes)
General cloud experience - AWS or Azure
Solid understanding of Infrastructure as Code (IaC)
Automation-first mindset

Operational / SRE Background

Previous experience in Site Reliability Engineering or Infrastructure Engineering
Knowledge of observability, monitoring, and operational tooling

API Integration

Strong understanding of REST & GraphQL APIs
Ability to build and maintain automation against internal/external APIs

Please get in touch and apply if you are seeking an exciting new contract opportunity and meet the above requirements.

Please click to find out more about our Key Information Documents. Please note that the documents provided contain generic information. If we are successful in finding you an assignment, you will receive a Key Information Document which will be specific to the vendor set-up you have chosen and your placement.

To find out more about Computer Futures please visit

Computer Futures, a trading division of SThree Partnership LLP is acting as an Employment Business in relation to this vacancy | Registered office | 8 Bishopsgate, London, EC2N 4BQ, United Kingdom | Partnership Number | OC(phone number removed) England and Wales

Related Jobs

View all jobs

DevOps / System Engineer

Automation Engineer

Platform engineer

Fullstack Engineer

Backend Engineer

DevSecOps Engineer

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 Cloud Computing Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Cloud Job?

If you are aiming for a role in cloud computing, it can feel like the skills list never ends. One job advert asks for AWS, Terraform and Kubernetes. Another mentions Azure DevOps, PowerShell and ARM templates. A third throws in Docker, Python, Linux, CI/CD, monitoring tools and security frameworks. It is no surprise that many cloud job seekers feel overwhelmed before they even apply. Here is the reality most cloud hiring managers agree on: they are not hiring you because you know every cloud tool. They are hiring you because you understand cloud concepts, can design reliable systems, manage costs, keep things secure and support real workloads. Tools matter, but only when they support outcomes. So how many cloud computing tools do you actually need to know to get a job? For most roles, 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 capable and employable rather than scattered.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Cloud Computing Job Applications (UK Guide)

anding a job in cloud computing can be highly competitive — especially in the UK market where demand far outpaces supply in many segments. Whether you’re aiming for roles in Cloud Engineering, DevOps, Site Reliability, Cloud Architecture, Security, Data/Analytics, or Platform Operations, hiring managers screen applications quickly and with specific priorities in mind. Hiring managers don’t read every detail at first; they scan for critical signals in the first 10–20 seconds. These early signals determine whether your CV gets read more closely, whether your LinkedIn profile gets clicked, and whether you’re invited to interview. This guide breaks down, in practical terms, exactly what hiring managers look for first in cloud computing applications — and what you should emphasise in your CV, cover letter and portfolio to stand out on www.cloudcomputingjobs.co.uk .

The Skills Gap in Cloud Computing Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Cloud computing underpins almost every modern digital service. From financial systems and healthcare platforms to AI, e-commerce, government infrastructure and cybersecurity, the cloud is now the default operating environment for UK organisations. Demand for cloud professionals has grown rapidly, with roles spanning architecture, engineering, security, DevOps, platform operations and cost optimisation. Salaries remain high, and vacancies remain stubbornly difficult to fill. Yet despite a growing number of graduates with computer science, IT and software engineering degrees, employers across the UK report a persistent problem: Too many candidates are not job-ready for real cloud computing roles. This is not a question of intelligence or motivation. It is a structural skills gap between what universities teach and what cloud jobs actually require. This article explores that gap in depth: what universities do well, what they consistently miss, why the gap exists, what employers genuinely want, and how jobseekers can bridge the divide to build sustainable careers in cloud computing.