Engineer the backbone that powers the next generation of life-science breakthroughs.
Biotech is moving faster than ever, but most labs are still slowed down by fragile infrastructure, manual deployment processes, and systems that were never built to scale with real-world scientific workflows. Lab Thread exists to change that. We’re building a next-generation LIMS/ELN platform that unifies bioinformatics, automation, and cloud infrastructure into one coherent system. To get there, we need a Senior DevOps Engineer to own, automate, and harden it.
Lab Thread is an engineering-driven biotech SaaS company founded in 2023. We are the digital nervous system for modern small and mid-sized laboratories — software that enables scientists to design DNA sequences, track experiments, and accelerate discoveries.
Here, your uptime isn’t just a metric — it’s the difference between a successful experiment and a lost year of research. The stability and automation you build will have a direct, tangible impact on scientific progress.
Azure · MSSQL · Terraform · Bicep · Bash · PowerShell · Azure CLI · Docker · Bitbucket Pipelines · CI/CD · Azure Monitor
We build on Infrastructure as Code and automate everything we can. No legacy burden, no inherited debt, no corporate bureaucracy — just real engineering decisions.
This is not a ticket-driven role. You will:
You’re a senior engineer who views manual work as a bug that needs to be fixed, and builds self-healing infrastructure instead.
Nice-to-haves:
In 30 days: You’ve audited our Azure setup, stabilised existing CI/CD pipelines, and identified the first three high-impact targets for full automation.
In 6 months: Our MSSQL setup is fully automated and highly available. You’ve implemented IaC across all core environments and established clear observability across the platform.
In 1 year: You’ve set the gold standard for DevOps at Lab Thread, significantly reduced deployment friction, and built infrastructure that scales with the platform’s global growth.
Ready to build the infrastructure whose stability you measure in discoveries, not uptime dashboards? Send your CV — we’d love to talk.