General Matter
DevOps / Site Reliability Engineer
Los Angeles, CA$100k–$200kmidAdded today
About this role
General Matter seeks a DevOps/SRE engineer to build and operate critical infrastructure supporting uranium enrichment R&D and production. You'll own observability, alerting, incident response, and developer tooling in a mission-critical environment where reliability directly impacts safety.
What you'll do
- Design and maintain observability, alerting, and monitoring systems across production infrastructure
- Instrument all critical services with metrics, logs, and traces for comprehensive visibility
- Own CI/CD pipelines, developer productivity tools, and internal platforms
- Participate in on-call rotation and respond to production incidents with discipline
- Lead incident reviews and implement long-term reliability improvements
- Automate operational workflows to reduce manual toil and improve resilience
What they're looking for
- Web service development and distributed systems fundamentals
- Networking, DNS, TLS/certificate management, HTTP
- Production system operations and debugging
- Observability tools (Prometheus, Grafana, OpenTelemetry, Datadog)
- Cloud infrastructure and infrastructure-as-code
- CI/CD pipeline design and management
- Incident response and root cause analysis
- Scripting and maintainable code in multiple languages
Benefits
- Base salary $100,000–$200,000 annually
- Stock options as long-term incentive
- Medical, vision, and dental coverage
- 401(k) retirement plan
- Mission-driven work in nuclear fuel production
- Work with world-class engineering team
Opens the official application on the employer’s site. No login required.
General Matter
General Matter develops nuclear fuel enrichment systems and production infrastructure. The company is hiring for engineering roles including EHS, quality, manufacturing systems, tooling, and test systems engineers to support its uranium enrichment operations and manufacturing processes.
View all jobs at General MatterLikely interview questions
- Describe a production incident you responded to—what went wrong, how you diagnosed it, and what you'd do differently
- How would you design a monitoring and alerting strategy for safety-critical uranium enrichment systems?