Amazon Data Services, Inc.

Supply Chain/Transportation Management, Internal Procurement, Cloud Computing

HardwareCommoditySpecialist,AWSInfrastructureandSupplyChain

$80–110k Seattle, Washington, United States FULL TIME
Market Sentiment
HIGH DEMAND

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

The Brief

“Hardware Commodity Specialist, AWS Infrastructure and Supply Chain at Amazon Data Services, Inc.. Skills: Supply chain, Procurement, Data analysis. Manage procurement. Manage operational supply chain activities”

What You'll Achieve.

Achieve continuity of supply; Achieve cost goals

Industry & Context.

Supply Chain/Transportation Management, Internal Procurement, Cloud Computing
Problems you'll solve

Diving deep into data sources; Debug data related issues; Using data to influence decision makers

What They're Looking For.

Must Have

Bachelor's degree or above in Business, Procurement, Logistics, Accounting, Supply Chain Management, Supply Chain Analysis, Construction, or other related fields

Nice to Have

Experience in supply chain program, project, or automation related product management, Leading an implementation of a product

What You'll Do.

Manage operational supply chain activities

Understand forecasting

Understand demand planning

Understand material planning

Understand manufacturing processes

Verify supply commitments

Participate in requirements gathering

Understand the supply chain network

Develop analytical tools

Produce written recommendations

Produce written insights

How You'll Work.

Team & Collaboration

Internal and external cross functional teams; Various analytics teams; Software development teams

Communication Scope

Writing skills

Full Job Description

Amazon Web Services (AWS) provides a highly reliable, scalable, and low-cost cloud platform that powers thousands of businesses in over 190 countries. AWS’ Infrastructure Supply Chain & Procurement (ISCaP) organization works to deliver cutting-edge solutions to source, build and maintain our socially responsible data center supply chains. We are a team of highly-motivated, engaged, and responsive professionals who enable the core sustainable infrastructure of AWS. Come join our team and be a part of history as we deliver results for the largest cloud services company on Earth! We are seeking a Hardware Commodity Specialist to join a team that handles one of Amazon’s fastest growing commodities – Fiber Optic Cable (sub-tier). In this role, the candidate will manage procurement and related operational supply chain activities in close collaboration with both internal and external cross functional teams. These are critical for AWS to achieve continuity of supply and cost goals. We are open to hiring candidates to work out of Seattle, WA, USA. Key job responsibilities The successful candidate must be a self-starter and have ability to work in a fast-paced and ever-changing environment. Candidates must have excellent analytical capabilities, supply chain experience. Candidate should be comfortable with diving deep into data sources to debug data related issues, and have strong writing skills. The ideal candidate will not only raise the bar on delivering the right supply at the right time, but also is a person who actively participates with a strong curiosity to understand the business end-to-end, and has a track record of using data to influence decision makers. In this role you will: Understand forecasting, demand planning, material planning, and manufacturing processes to verify supply commitments Work with internal and external stakeholders analyze demand, create orders, reconcile allocation and manage invoicing and payment Participate in requirements gathering Underst

Free ATS check

Applying for this Hardware Commodity Specialist, AWS Infrastructure and Supply Chain 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 Data Services, Inc.?

Real rants from real employees. Read before you apply.

Read Company Rants →