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We hire ~1–2 engineers per year

We hire rarely.
When we do, we hire carefully.

Cloudico, est. 2022 Currently 6 senior
engineers on staff
across cloud, SRE,
and ML platform

Open positions 0 active · talent
network always open
for future openings

We’re a 6-person consultancy that caps engagements at eight at a time. That math means we hire a senior engineer once every six to twelve months — never to fill a seat, always to make the firm meaningfully better. If you’d be a fit, we’d like to know about you before we’re hiring, not after.

1
Open positions

Right now: no active openings.

Updated weekly. When a role opens, it appears below with full editorial treatment — never as a one-line job ID with a checkbox grid. Until then, the talent network application is the way in: we read every one of them, file good notes, and reach out when a fit appears.

Status
Talent network open
Next expected hire
Q1 2027 · tentative
Hires last 12 months
1
Applications read
All of them. Personally.
02 Position

What we don’t hire for.

Most career pages list everything they want. We’d rather list what we won’t hire for. If any of this rules you out, we’d rather you find out now than at the offer stage.

01
Junior engineers, even “senior-track” ones
Instead We hire only at senior level — typically 8–15 years of production experience. If you want to grow into senior here, we’d love to talk in five years.
02
Recruiters as gatekeepers between you and us
Instead The first email back to you comes from the founder or the lead engineer for the role — not an HR coordinator. We don’t work with external recruiters either.
03
Leetcode-style algorithm puzzles
Instead Two-hour paid technical exercise based on actual problems we’ve solved for clients. We pay $200 for your time whether or not we move forward.
04
Take-home tests longer than 2 hours
Instead We respect that you have a job and a life. Two hours, capped. If we need more signal, we’ll buy you a follow-up paid hour, not extend the take-home.
05
“Culture fit” as a gating criterion
Instead We hire for professional fit — can you ship senior engineering work, write clearly, push back when we’re wrong. The rest is private and yours.
06
Contract-to-hire bait-and-switch
Instead Every hire is a full-time offer from day one, with full comp, equity, and benefits. No probationary contracts. No “let’s see how it goes” gigs.
07
Hiring to scale for the sake of growth
Instead We hire only when capacity is genuinely needed. The eight-engagement cap is firm-wide. Adding people changes math, not philosophy.
03 Role archetypes

What we’d hire for in principle.

None of these roles are open right now. We’ve written them out so the bar is visible — and so when an opening appears, the description is ready, not bolted together by HR in a hurry.

Reliability Engineering

Reliability Engineer

Open · accepting now
Years6-12+
LocationLahore (on-site)
TypeFull-time

You have carried a pager for a real product. You can read a postmortem and tell what went unsaid. You write runbooks people actually use.

Cloud Infrastructure

Senior Cloud Engineer

No opening · talent net
Years8–15+
LocationLahore / Remote
TypeFull-time

What you’d actually do

Lead 3–4 concurrent cloud infrastructure engagements per year — each one running 8–16 weeks. You’d be the named engineer on every proposal, the person on the first call, the person writing the Terraform, the person on the handover. No staffing layers between you and the client.

  • AWS Organizations migrations, multi-account guardrails, IAM redesigns under audit pressure
  • Production cutover work — the kind where you write a rollback plan before you write the change
  • Direct client work, including the political conversations, not just the technical ones

What we’d expect

You’ve already shipped this kind of work somewhere serious. Probably in-house for a Series B+ company, possibly at a more senior level than you’d like to admit. You can write a paragraph about a system without it sounding like marketing. You’ve been on call for at least one workload that mattered.

  • Production AWS at scale (not just “I built a side project on AWS”)
  • Terraform fluency — not just usage, design of module structures other engineers will inherit
  • The ability to push back on a client architecture decision without losing the room
  • Comfort working in client repos and tools, not building everything from scratch

What we won’t compromise on

Writing. You’ll write a weekly summary for every client every week. If “200–400 words on what shipped this week” sounds like a chore, this firm will be the wrong place. If it sounds like the obvious move, we’ll get along.

Reliability Engineering

Senior Site Reliability Engineer

No opening · talent net
Years7–15+
LocationLahore / Remote
TypeFull-time

What you’d actually do

Run reliability engagements for Series B–C teams where the on-call rotation is bleeding senior engineers. SLO design with product teams in the room, alert pruning that sometimes deletes 1,000+ rules, incident review facilitation, and the unglamorous postmortem-template work that turns “we had a bad week” into “here’s the one process change we’re making.”

  • SLO workshops with product and engineering — not just engineering deciding in isolation
  • Embedded retainer work — you’ll be in their PagerDuty rotation for 6 months at a time
  • Facilitating client incident reviews where we’re in the room, not running the room

What we’d expect

You’ve run SRE at a place where reliability mattered — not in the abstract sense, but in the sense where a sustained outage cost the company real money or real customers. You’ve been the senior person on call. You know that the engineering work is 30% of the job and the process / political work is the other 70%.

  • 5+ years on-call rotation in production, ideally as the tech lead of the rotation
  • Comfortable with Prometheus, Grafana, OpenTelemetry, and the political work of changing how a team responds to incidents
  • Strong written postmortem skill — samples requested at interview

What we won’t compromise on

Empathy with on-call engineers. If your instinct is “they just need to learn to deal with it,” we’re not aligned. Most of our reliability work is making the human cost of on-call lower, not just the page-rate lower.

AI Infrastructure

ML Platform Engineer

No opening · talent net
Years6–12+
LocationRemote (PKT-friendly)
TypeFull-time

What you’d actually do

Lead AI infrastructure engagements for AI-native startups and Series A–C teams running into the Bedrock-cost wall. vLLM tuning, Triton routing, GPU-aware Kubernetes, fine-tuning pipelines, eval harnesses. The work that takes a team from “we just turned on Bedrock and the bill is scary” to “we run our own inference and the cost curve is linear.”

  • Migrations from Bedrock / SageMaker / Vertex to self-hosted inference
  • Eval harness design with real customer traffic — not synthetic benchmarks
  • Production GPU operations: spot sourcing, MIG, Karpenter for GPU nodes, the unglamorous reality of running H100s

What we’d expect

You’ve already run LLM inference at production scale somewhere — not just tutorial-level vLLM, but the version where you’ve tuned --max-num-seqs, debugged a chunked-prefill regression, and watched a router’s connection pooling get blamed for vLLM’s p99 numbers. You can write a paragraph about PagedAttention without sounding like a paper summary.

  • Production vLLM or Triton experience — the difference between “I deployed it” and “I tuned it for a real workload”
  • Kubernetes on GPUs — Karpenter, NVIDIA device plugin, the operational reality
  • Fluency in the cost model — you can explain to a CFO why Bedrock dependency compounds non-linearly

What we won’t compromise on

The eval-before-infrastructure discipline. Every migration we’ve done has succeeded because we built the eval harness before the vLLM cluster. If your instinct is “let’s ship the cluster first and figure out eval later,” we’ll get along worse than you’d hope.

04 Where you’d work

Lahore office or remote. Both real options.

We’re honest about the trade-offs of each, because too many companies pretend the modes are interchangeable. They aren’t. Pick the one that matches how you actually want to work.

Option A · On-site

The Lahore office.

A small office in Gulberg, Lahore. Mostly used by Hassan and Maryam day-to-day. Quiet, technical, no open-plan theater. We don’t mandate office attendance — the people who like working in offices choose this; the people who don’t work remotely.

  • AddressGulberg III, Lahore
  • MandateNone · opt-in
  • Days in-office~3 of our 6 engineers
  • EquipmentProvided · MacBook Pro · 4K display
  • Commute helpYes, if it matters
Option B · Remote

Remote, PKT-friendly.

We hire remote engineers anywhere with reasonable overlap with PKT business hours. That typically means UTC–3 through UTC+8 work. David is in Lisbon, our last hire is in Istanbul. We won’t pretend North America time zones work for this team.

  • Time zoneUTC–3 to UTC+8
  • Overlap min4 hrs with PKT (UTC+5)
  • Office daysOptional · ~1x per year team gathering
  • Equipment$3.5k stipend or company hardware
  • Comp parityYes · location-adjusted modestly
05 How we hire

The process, end to end.

Four stages. We aim for two to three weeks total. Most companies hide their hiring process from candidates — we’d rather you know exactly what you’re committing to before you commit.

i
Day 1–3

Written exchange

ii
Day 4–7

45-min technical call

iii
Day 8–14

Paid exercise

iv
Day 15–18

Offer or honest no

Stage I · Written exchange

You send us a few paragraphs — not a resume, prose. We read it, reply within 72 hours, usually with two or three follow-up questions. If we’re not a fit at this stage we tell you — with a real reason, not a form rejection.

Stage II · Technical call

45-minute video call with the lead engineer for the role. No leetcode. We’ll talk through a real production incident we hit recently and ask what you’d have done. You should leave the call knowing more about us, not less.

Stage III · Paid exercise

A two-hour technical exercise based on a redacted real client problem we’ve solved. We pay $200 for your time whether or not we move forward. You keep your work. We never reuse exercise submissions in client work.

Stage IV · Offer or no

A 30-minute conversation with the founder. Comp, start date, equity, expectations. You get an answer within 48 hours, with a written rationale either way. If it’s a no, we’ll tell you what would change our mind for next time.

06 The reality

What it’s actually like here.

Not perks. Operational reality. The kind of thing you’d want to know on day three, written down on day zero.

01

You’d be a peer, not a report.

Six senior engineers means the org chart is mostly flat. You report to the founder for administrative things (compensation, time off, etc.) and to no one for engineering. You’ll be expected to act like a peer of the founders from day one — including pushing back when you think they’re wrong.

02

You’ll be on two to four client engagements per year.

Not in parallel. We rotate engineers off engagements as cleanly as we rotate them on. Between engagements you’ll have a week or two of internal time — not vacation, but time for writing, tool-building, or just sharpening the saw. Nobody’s billable target is set per quarter.

03

You’re named on every proposal.

The proposal that goes to the client has your name and a link to your LinkedIn. If you don’t want to be public-facing in that way, this firm isn’t the right fit. The accountability and the credibility are both real — you get the engagement, and the client knows exactly who they’re getting.

04

Compensation is transparent across the firm.

Every engineer at the same level makes the same band, within $10k. Equity participation in firm profit is the same percentage for everyone at the same level — not negotiated case-by-case. We share the firm’s revenue and cost numbers quarterly with the team, including margins per engagement.

05

Paid time off is genuinely flexible.

No formal day count. The expectation is that you take at least 25 days a year off. We’ve had engineers take 6 weeks. We’ve never had a problem with anyone taking too much — the failure mode here is taking too little. The founder takes 5 weeks a year and tells everyone, on purpose.

06

On-call is shared, not stacked.

For the engagements where on-call is part of the work (Reliability retainers, some AI Infra), the rotation is shared across the team — not stacked on the engineer who “owns” that engagement. Nobody carries the pager every week. We rotate weekly during retainer periods, paid separately from base.

07

You’ll write a lot.

Weekly client summaries. Postmortems. Proposals. Internal memos. If you don’t enjoy writing, this firm will exhaust you. If you do, you’ll find that the writing surfaces the thinking — and the thinking is most of what gets paid for here. We review writing samples seriously at interview.

07 How to apply

If any of the above matches you, here’s the form.

Three real fields. We don’t need a resume PDF, a cover letter, or a list of references. We need to know what you’d bring, in your own words.

The talent network application.

No open positions right now. This form puts you on the list we read first when an opening matches. Most hires we make come from this list.

The link to your work matters more than your resume. A GitHub profile we can read for an hour. A blog post you wrote. A talk you gave. Anything that shows your thinking, not just your job titles.

Read by Hassan, not a recruiter or applicant tracking system.
You hear back within 7 days — with a personal note, not auto-acknowledgment.
When an opening appears, you’re contacted first before we publicly post anything.
Your information is never shared with anyone outside the firm. Period.
Reviewed within 7 days · personal reply guaranteed
We’ll see you in a year or two,
when one of us is ready.
Or just email Hassan directly