Software Development Manager , AWS DynamoDB
Amazon · Seattle, WA · Software Development
About this role
Amazon is hiring a manager-level Engineering Manager in the software engineering function based in Seattle, WA. The posting calls out experience with Java, C#, DynamoDB, Performance Optimization. Compensation is listed at $184,900–$250,200 per year.
- Role
- Engineering Manager
- Function
- software engineering
- Level
- manager
- Track
- hybrid
- Employment
- Full-time
- Location
- Seattle, WA
- Department
- Software Development
- Posted
- May 18, 2026
More roles at Amazon
Job description
from Amazon careersAre you passionate about data analysis and performance optimization? DynamoDB Performance Analysis team is seeking a Software Development Manager to lead a team that develops expertise in data analysis across the core systems of the DynamoDB stack. You'll drive the expansion of components for which the team owns performance qualification and analysis, and bringing industry standards to identify performance bottlenecks. In this role, you'll work with partner teams to align on requirements and expectations, delivering solutions that empower services to analyze latency data, including latency attribution. You'll support data analysis initiatives while building a team focused on scalable self-service capabilities for performance analysis across DynamoDB development teams. Key job responsibilities - Lead and grow a high-performing engineering team focused on data analysis and performance optimization across DynamoDB's core systems - Define team charter, vision, and roadmaps to deliver standardized, scalable self-service capabilities for performance analysis - Partner with cross-functional teams to align on requirements and deliver solutions for latency data analysis and attribution - Drive architectural decisions and technical strategy for performance qualification tools and bottleneck identification systems - Establish mechanisms to scale team operations while maintaining end-to-end ownership of delivered software systems A day in the life You'll start…