DevOps Engineer Resume Template

A template built for infrastructure roles — designed to showcase CI/CD pipelines, cloud architecture, container orchestration, and the reliability metrics that prove you can keep production systems running at scale.

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Rachel Kim
rachel.kim@email.com | (503) 555-0274 | linkedin.com/in/rachelkim-devops | github.com/rkim-infra
Summary

DevOps engineer with 5 years of experience building and maintaining cloud infrastructure at scale. Led the migration of Datadog’s CI/CD platform from Jenkins to GitHub Actions, reducing build times by 65% and deployment failures by 80% while supporting 200+ microservices across 40 engineering teams.

Experience
Senior DevOps Engineer
Datadog New York, NY
  • Led migration of CI/CD infrastructure from Jenkins to GitHub Actions across 200+ microservices, reducing average build times from 22 minutes to 8 minutes and cutting deployment failures from 12% to 2.4%
  • Designed and implemented a Kubernetes-based auto-scaling system on AWS EKS that handles 3x traffic spikes during customer onboarding waves, reducing infrastructure costs by 28% through right-sizing and spot instance utilization
  • Built a centralized observability stack using Prometheus, Grafana, and PagerDuty that reduced mean time to detection (MTTD) from 15 minutes to under 90 seconds across all production services
DevOps Engineer
HashiCorp San Francisco, CA
  • Managed Terraform Cloud’s production infrastructure serving 50K+ organizations, maintaining 99.97% uptime over 18 months through automated failover and blue-green deployments
  • Automated infrastructure provisioning with Terraform modules and Ansible playbooks, reducing new environment spin-up time from 3 days to 25 minutes
  • Implemented secrets management using HashiCorp Vault across 30+ services, eliminating all hardcoded credentials and passing SOC 2 audit requirements with zero findings
Skills

Cloud: AWS, GCP, Azure   Containers: Docker, Kubernetes, Helm, EKS, GKE   CI/CD: GitHub Actions, Jenkins, ArgoCD, Terraform, Ansible   Monitoring: Prometheus, Grafana, Datadog, PagerDuty   Languages: Python, Go, Bash

Education
B.S. Computer Science
Oregon State University

What makes a strong DevOps engineer resume

Reliability metrics are your headline

DevOps hiring managers scan for numbers that prove you can keep systems running. Uptime percentages, MTTR (mean time to recovery), MTTD (mean time to detection), deployment frequency, change failure rates — these are the four DORA metrics that the industry uses to measure DevOps maturity, and they should be prominent in your bullets. A bullet like “maintained 99.97% uptime across 50K+ customers” says more than a paragraph of description. If you don’t have exact numbers, approximate honestly — “reduced deployment failures from ~weekly to less than once per quarter” still works.

Scale is the multiplier

Infrastructure work gets dramatically more impressive with scale. “Set up a Kubernetes cluster” is a junior bullet. “Designed a multi-region Kubernetes platform supporting 200 microservices and 40 engineering teams” is a senior one. Always include the scale: number of services, number of teams supported, request volume, number of environments, data throughput. These numbers tell the hiring manager what level of complexity you’ve operated at.

Cost optimization is an underrated signal

Cloud bills are one of the biggest line items at most tech companies, and DevOps engineers who can reduce them are extremely valuable. If you’ve saved money through right-sizing, spot instances, reserved capacity, or better auto-scaling, put it on your resume. “Reduced AWS spend by 28% ($340K annually) through spot instance utilization and right-sizing” is the kind of bullet that gets you to the phone screen.

Security and compliance aren’t boring — they’re essential

SOC 2 compliance, secrets management, network policies, IAM configurations — these might not sound exciting, but they’re critical for any company handling user data. If you’ve implemented Vault, managed IAM policies at scale, or helped pass a compliance audit, those bullets show maturity that many DevOps candidates lack. Don’t bury compliance work at the bottom of your resume.

Key skills for DevOps engineer resumes

Include the ones you actually have. Leave out the ones you’d struggle to discuss in an interview.

Technical Skills

AWS GCP Kubernetes Docker Terraform Ansible GitHub Actions Jenkins ArgoCD Prometheus Grafana Linux Python Go Bash Helm

What DevOps Interviews Focus On

System Design Incident Response CI/CD Architecture Infrastructure as Code Networking Fundamentals Security Best Practices Cost Optimization Monitoring Strategy Disaster Recovery On-Call Management

Recommended template for DevOps roles

Classic resume template preview

Classic

DevOps resumes tend to be dense with technical specifics — tool names, metrics, infrastructure scale. The Classic template’s clean serif layout handles this density well, keeping everything scannable even when your bullets are packed with Kubernetes cluster sizes and deployment frequency numbers.

If you’re applying to startups or platform engineering teams with a more modern culture, the Modern template is a reasonable alternative. But for most infrastructure roles, Classic is the safest choice.

Use this template

Frequently asked questions

What’s the difference between DevOps and SRE on a resume?
DevOps roles typically emphasize CI/CD, infrastructure automation, and developer tooling. SRE (Site Reliability Engineering) roles emphasize reliability, incident response, SLOs/SLIs, and error budgets. In practice, there’s significant overlap — many engineers do both. On your resume, lean into whichever set of metrics and responsibilities matches the job posting.
Should I list every tool I’ve used?
No. List the tools you’ve used meaningfully in production, not every tool you’ve touched in a tutorial. A focused skills section with 15–20 tools you can discuss in depth is stronger than a wall of 40 tool names. Hiring managers know that someone who lists everything probably knows nothing deeply.
How do I show DevOps experience if my title was “Software Engineer”?
Many engineers do DevOps work without the title. Focus your bullet points on the infrastructure, CI/CD, and reliability work you did — not on your title. If you built the deployment pipeline, managed Kubernetes clusters, or set up monitoring, those are DevOps bullets regardless of what your business card said.

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