Incident Response Manager - Product & Engineering
Anthropic · New York City, NY | San Francisco, CA | Seattle, WA · Technical Program Management
About this role
Anthropic is hiring a manager-level Engineering Manager in the software engineering function based in New York City, NY | San Francisco, CA | Seattle, WA. The posting calls out experience with Distributed Systems, Incident Response, Cloud Computing, OpenAI. Compensation is listed at $290,000–$365,000 per year.
- Role
- Engineering Manager
- Function
- software engineering
- Level
- manager
- Track
- hybrid
- Employment
- Full-time
- Location
- New York City, NY | San Francisco, CA | Seattle, WA
- Department
- Technical Program Management
More roles at Anthropic
Job description
from Anthropic careersAbout Anthropic
Anthropic’s mission is to create reliable, interpretable, and steerable AI systems. We want AI to be safe and beneficial for our users and for society as a whole. Our team is a quickly growing group of committed researchers, engineers, policy experts, and business leaders working together to build beneficial AI systems.
About the Role
We are looking for an Incident Response Manager to serve as the operational backbone of how Anthropic handles incidents. When things go wrong, you are the person who makes sure the right people are in the room, the right information is flowing, and nothing falls through the cracks.
The right person for this role brings structure and rigor to high-volume, high-stakes situations without waiting for a playbook to be handed to them. You will work across engineering, product, security, legal, go-to-market, and leadership to ensure Anthropic responds to incidents with speed, clarity, and accountability. This is not a role where you follow existing runbooks; it is a role where you write them, and where you operate effectively even when the runbook does not yet exist.
Responsibilities
- Build the incident response management function, establishing the processes, tooling, and operational standards that define how we handle incidents at scale