Amazon Web Services, Inc.

Technology

ElectricalEngineer,DataCenterEngineering

$117–160k Seattle, Washington, United States FULL TIME
Market Sentiment
HIGH DEMAND

Neural analysis suggests this role is
optimal for Mid+ candidates.

The Brief

“Electrical Engineer, Data Center Engineering at Amazon Web Services, Inc.. Skills: Data Center Engineering, Electrical Design, Commissioning, Mission Critical Facilities. Produce documentation. Safeguard implementation of Global Electrical Basis of Design”

What You'll Achieve.

Meet quality requirements; Meet budgetary requirements; Achievable and testable specifications; Lowest possible cost

Industry & Context.

Technology
Problems you'll solve

Analyze energy efficiency data; Collaborate on cooling solutions

What They're Looking For.

Must Have

4+ years industrial/commercial engineering, 4+ years commissioning experience, Bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering, Knowledge of Microsoft Office, Experience researching new designs, Experience in commissioning

Nice to Have

Professional Engineer License, Experience with building codes, Experience carrying design concepts through deployment, Experience reading construction drawings, Familiarity with medium voltage distribution systems

What You'll Do.

Produce documentation

Safeguard implementation of Global Electrical Basis of Design

Drive standardization in data center electrical designs

Develop strategic solutions

Turn goals into specifications

Provide technical support

Work with regional vendors

Specify electrical equipment

Work on concurrent projects

How You'll Work.

Team & Collaboration

Global team members; Cross-functional teams

Communication Scope

Technical documentation; White papers; Design specifications

Full Job Description

AWS Infrastructure Services (AIS) AWS Infrastructure Services owns the design, planning, delivery, and operation of all AWS global infrastructure. In other words, we’re the people who keep the cloud running. We support all AWS data centers and all of the servers, storage, networking, power, and cooling equipment that ensure our customers have continual access to the innovation they rely on. We work on the most challenging problems, with thousands of variables impacting the supply chain — and we’re looking for talented people who want to help. You’ll join a diverse team of software, hardware, and network engineers, supply chain specialists, security experts, operations managers, and other vital roles. You’ll collaborate with people across AWS to help us deliver the highest standards for safety and security while providing seemingly infinite capacity at the lowest possible cost for our customers. And you’ll experience an inclusive culture that welcomes bold ideas and empowers you to own them to completion. The Worldwide Sustainability (WWS) organization capitalizes on Amazon’s scale, speed, ability to build, invent, and simplify a resilient and sustainable company. We manage our social and environmental impacts globally, and drive solutions that enable our customers, businesses, and the world to become more sustainable. Key job responsibilities - Produce clear and concise documentation such as detailed design specifications, drawings, white papers, wiring schematics and diagrams, and reports. - Understand and safeguard implementation of the Global Electrical Basis of Design (BoD) by driving standardization in the data center electrical designs. - Development of strategic solutions, which meet or exceed our quality requirements and fall within our budgetary requirements. Capture requirements and turn aspirational company or customer goals into well-defined, achievable and testable specifications and solutions. - Define project scope and provide technical support for in

Free ATS check

Applying for this Electrical Engineer, Data Center Engineering role?

Most applicants get filtered before a human reads their resume. See if yours makes the cut.

ANONYMOUS · UNFILTERED

What do employees actually say about Amazon Web Services, Inc.?

Real rants from real employees. Read before you apply.

Read Company Rants →