Mid-Level (2-5 years)

Cloud Migration Coordinator

You're the person who keeps a cloud migration project moving, making sure all the pieces fit together. You'll be the glue between the technical teams and the project plan, translating what's needed into actionable steps and chasing down anything that's stuck. Think of yourself as the air traffic controller for servers moving from our data centres into the cloud.

Job ID
JD-TECH-CLMI-002
Department
Technical Roles
NOS Level
Level 5-6
OFQUAL Level
Level 5-6
Experience
Mid-Level (2-5 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Cloud Migration Coordinator is here to make sure our cloud migration waves actually happen, on time and without too many fireworks. You'll be taking the overall migration plan and breaking it down into daily tasks, then making sure everyone involved—from network engineers to application owners—knows what they need to do and when. This role sits right in the thick of it, connecting our legacy infrastructure teams with our shiny new cloud platform team. You'll be translating complex technical requirements into project plans, tracking progress, and flagging issues before they become full-blown crises. When this role is done well, migrations run smoothly, applications move without downtime, and our business keeps ticking along. If it's not, well, critical systems can go offline, projects get delayed by weeks, and we're looking at some serious costs and unhappy customers. The challenge? It's like herding cats, sometimes. You're relying on a lot of different people, and things rarely go exactly to plan. But the reward is seeing a complex, high-stakes project successfully land in the cloud, knowing you were a huge part of making it happen.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: You're directly responsible for the smooth execution of migration waves, which means you're helping us shut down expensive data centres and move to a more agile, cost-effective cloud infrastructure. Get it right, and we save money and innovate faster. Get it wrong, and we face downtime, budget overruns, and a lot of frustrated colleagues.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Task Completion Rate for Assigned Move Groups
  2. Desc: The percentage of migration tasks you're responsible for that get finished by their due date.
  3. Target: >95% on-time completion
  4. Freq: Weekly, reviewed in 1:1s and project stand-ups
  5. Example: If your assigned move group has 50 tasks for the week, you'll aim to get 48-49 of them done or formally re-planned with agreement.
  6. Metric: Runbook Accuracy for Cutover Events
  7. Desc: How many errors or missing steps are found in the migration runbooks you've helped prepare.
  8. Target: Zero critical errors or omissions
  9. Freq: Per migration cutover, reviewed during pre-migration 'go/no-go' calls
  10. Example: Your runbook for the 'Finance Reporting' move group correctly listed all DNS updates, firewall changes, and application startup sequences, preventing any delays.
  11. Metric: Reduction in Migration-Related Incidents
  12. Desc: The number of unplanned outages or major issues that happen during or immediately after a migration wave you've coordinated.
  13. Target: <1 major incident per 10 migrations
  14. Freq: Monthly, tracked against overall migration programme
  15. Example: You coordinated 12 server migrations this quarter, and only one had a minor, non-critical issue that was resolved within 30 minutes, keeping us well under target.
  16. Metric: Stakeholder Update Timeliness
  17. Desc: How consistently you provide status updates to relevant teams and project managers.
  18. Target: All scheduled updates delivered on time
  19. Freq: Weekly, via project dashboards and team meetings
  20. Example: Your weekly status report for the 'CRM Migration' wave was sent out every Monday morning, giving everyone a clear picture of progress and blockers.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Problem Identification & Escalation
  2. Desc: Your ability to spot potential problems early and get the right people involved before they become big issues.
  3. Evidence: You're often the first to flag a looming dependency issue or a resource conflict. You bring solutions or clear options to your manager, not just problems. You don't sit on bad news.
  4. Metric: Cross-Team Collaboration
  5. Desc: How effectively you work with different technical and business teams to get things done.
  6. Evidence: Other teams readily respond to your requests. You're seen as a helpful point of contact, not just someone chasing them. You can smooth over minor disagreements between teams.
  7. Metric: Documentation Quality
  8. Desc: The clarity and completeness of the documentation you produce, like task lists, dependency trackers, and meeting notes.
  9. Evidence: Your documentation is easy for anyone to understand, even if they weren't in the meeting. Key decisions and action items are clearly recorded and followed up on. People rarely ask for clarification on your notes.
  10. Metric: Adaptability to Change
  11. Desc: How well you handle it when plans change (and they will!) or new priorities pop up.
  12. Evidence: When a migration date shifts, you quickly re-plan tasks and communicate the new timeline without getting flustered. You can adjust your approach when a technical challenge requires a different solution.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Bringing Order to Chaos
  2. Daily: You get a genuine kick out of taking a messy, complex problem (like moving 100 applications) and breaking it down into manageable, trackable steps. You love seeing the 'to-do' list shrink.
  3. Motivator: Being the Central Hub
  4. Daily: You enjoy being the go-to person for information, the one who knows what's happening across different teams and can connect the dots. You like being the conduit for critical updates.
  5. Motivator: Achieving Tangible Outcomes
  6. Daily: You're driven by seeing a project actually complete. There’s a real sense of accomplishment when a server successfully moves to the cloud, and you know you played a key part.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll spend a fair bit of time chasing people for updates, and sometimes you'll feel like you're nagging. The 'urgent' request that disrupted your Thursday might get deprioritised on Friday, and you'll have to pivot quickly. You'll often be the messenger of bad news (delays, issues) even if they aren't your fault. If you need every piece of work you touch to be a deep technical dive or to see every single idea make it to production, you might struggle here.

Common Frustrations

  1. Archaeological Digs: Trying to migrate a 15-year-old application with zero documentation and the original developers long gone. It’s like being an IT detective with no clues.
  2. Ghost Stakeholders: Chasing application owners for critical information, only to find they are unresponsive, uncooperative, or view the migration as a low-priority distraction.
  3. The 2 AM Surprise: Discovering a critical, undocumented hard-coded IP address during the final cutover, forcing a high-stress rollback. It's never a fun call.
  4. Scope Creep by a Thousand Cuts: The endless stream of 'while you're in there, can you just...' requests that threaten to derail the entire migration timeline.
  5. Approval Limbo: Having a migration wave ready to go but being blocked for weeks waiting for sign-offs from separate Security, Networking, and Finance committees. The bureaucracy can be maddening.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. Deep, hands-on coding or infrastructure build-out: While you'll understand the tech, you won't be writing the Terraform or configuring the network yourself.
  2. Predictable, routine work: Expect curveballs. Plans change, issues arise, and you'll need to adapt constantly.
  3. Sole ownership of technical solutions: You're coordinating the solution, not designing the architecture from scratch.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, varied nature of managing multiple tasks and chasing different teams can be engaging and prevent boredom.
  2. The need for rapid problem-solving during cutovers can be stimulating and play to strengths in quick thinking.
  3. The role often requires switching contexts, which can suit those who thrive on novelty and diverse challenges.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Maintaining focus on detailed documentation or repetitive tasks can be challenging; using templates and breaking tasks into smaller chunks can help.
  2. Organisational systems (Jira, Confluence) are key; personalised training on how to best use these tools for tracking and reminders could be beneficial.
  3. Potential for overwhelm with many simultaneous requests; clear prioritisation frameworks and regular check-ins with your manager are crucial.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Strong verbal communication and problem-solving skills are highly valued, often compensating for written challenges.
  2. The ability to see the 'big picture' of a migration and connect disparate tasks can be a significant strength.
  3. Often excels in visualising complex workflows and dependencies, which is vital for migration planning.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Extensive reading and writing of documentation (runbooks, reports) might be challenging; tools with text-to-speech, grammar checkers, and clear, templated formats can help.
  2. Proofreading is critical; pairing with a colleague for important documents or using advanced AI writing assistants for initial drafts can be useful.
  3. Clear, concise written communication is important; training on structured writing for technical documents can be provided.

Autism Positives

  1. A strong adherence to processes and meticulous attention to detail (e.g., in runbooks) is highly valued and critical for success.
  2. The ability to identify patterns and logical inconsistencies in migration plans can be a significant asset.
  3. Clear, structured communication (e.g., in project tools like Jira) is often preferred and can be a strength.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex social dynamics and unspoken expectations across many teams can be challenging; explicit communication norms and clear expectations for interactions are helpful.
  2. Unexpected changes or last-minute shifts in plans can be difficult; advance notice and clear explanations for changes are important.
  3. Sensory overload during intense cutover calls (multiple voices, screens, high pressure) might be an issue; options for quieter workspaces or specific communication protocols could be explored.

Sensory Considerations

Our office environment is typically open-plan, so there can be background noise and activity. During cutover weekends, calls can be intense with multiple people talking. We can offer noise-cancelling headphones, quiet focus areas, and flexibility to work remotely during particularly intense periods if needed.

Flexibility Notes

We're pretty flexible about how you get your work done, as long as the job gets done. We'll work with you to find the best setup that supports your productivity and well-being. This isn't a 'bums on seats' culture.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Cloud Migration Coordinator (Mid-Level)
  2. Responsibilities: Take ownership of the coordination for a specific 'move group' (a collection of applications/servers moving together). This means knowing every task, every dependency, and who's responsible for what.
  3. Independently track and update migration tasks in Jira and Confluence, making sure all statuses are accurate and blockers are clearly logged. You'll be the source of truth for your assigned wave.
  4. Help prepare detailed migration runbooks for cutover events, working closely with technical teams to capture every step. You'll double-check these for accuracy.
  5. Coordinate pre-migration activities like dependency mapping sessions and readiness checks for your move group. This involves scheduling meetings, sending reminders, and making sure people actually turn up.
  6. Communicate progress, risks, and issues for your assigned migration wave to your Senior Coordinator and the broader project team. You'll be expected to provide clear, concise updates.
  7. Assist in post-migration verification activities, making sure everything has landed correctly and is working as expected. This might involve checking dashboards or running simple tests.
  8. Provide informal guidance and support to new or junior team members, helping them understand our processes and tools. Think of it as showing them the ropes.
  9. Supervision: You'll have weekly check-ins with your Senior Cloud Migration Coordinator. For routine tasks, you'll work independently, but you're expected to flag any novel or complex issues for discussion and guidance.
  10. Decision: You can make routine decisions within established guidelines for your assigned move group, like re-prioritising tasks within a week or adjusting meeting schedules. You'll escalate any technical architecture decisions, major timeline changes, or significant resource conflicts to your Senior Coordinator.
  11. Success: You'll know you're doing well when your assigned migration waves consistently hit their deadlines, have minimal post-migration issues, and other teams see you as a reliable, organised point of contact. Your documentation will be clear, and you'll be proactive in identifying and flagging potential problems.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 15-25 hours weekly with AI-powered migration tools!

Let's be real, a lot of coordination work can be repetitive, especially when you're dealing with hundreds of servers and applications. Imagine if you could offload some of that grunt work to AI. Well, you can.

ID:

Tool: Automated Discovery & Grouping

Benefit: Use smart AI tools to sift through our CMDB exports and network traffic logs. They can automatically suggest initial 'move groups' based on how applications talk to each other, saving you weeks of manual analysis. It's like having a super-fast detective for application dependencies.

ID:

Tool: Predictive Right-Sizing

Benefit: Before we even move a server, AI can analyse its on-premise performance data (CPU, RAM, I/O) and recommend the most cost-effective cloud instance types. This prevents us from over-provisioning in the cloud and getting a nasty surprise on the first bill. You'll be a hero for saving money.

ID:

Tool: Legacy Code Summarizer

Benefit: Got a 15-year-old application with basically no documentation? Point an AI assistant at its codebase. It can generate a plain-English summary of its purpose, key dependencies, and flag potential migration risks. This means less 'archaeological dig' and more actual migration.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Runbook & Comms Generator

Benefit: Based on a template and the specifics of your current migration wave (pulled from Jira), AI can generate a first draft of that detailed, step-by-step migration runbook. It can also draft stakeholder communication emails, so you're not starting from scratch every time. It's a massive time saver for routine comms.

Roughly 15-25 hours per week, allowing you to focus on higher-impact work. Weekly time savings potential
You'll have access to a suite of 3-5 core AI-powered tools, with more being added. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Cloud Migration Coordinator →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

These are the fundamental skills that underpin everything you'll do. They're not just 'nice-to-haves'; they're essential for keeping complex migration projects on track and communicating effectively with a diverse group of people.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the specific methodologies, technical concepts, and tools you'll be using day-in, day-out. You don't need to be an expert in everything, but you'll need to know enough to be dangerous and coordinate effectively.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

These prerequisites mean you're not starting from zero. You've got a solid foundation in how IT projects work and a basic grasp of cloud. We're looking for someone who can hit the ground running on coordination, even if the specific migration tech is new to them.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The key here is continuous learning. The cloud landscape shifts constantly, and staying curious and proactive about these emerging areas will make you an indispensable part of our team. We're here to support your growth, but a lot of this will come down to your own drive to learn.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need roughly 2-5 years of hands-on experience in a technical coordination, project support, or junior project management role. This should ideally include some exposure to infrastructure projects or, even better, cloud environments. We're looking for someone who's seen a few technical projects through from start to finish and understands the rhythm of delivery. Experience working with multiple technical teams and chasing dependencies is key.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

The skills you'll gain in this role – project coordination, cloud understanding, stakeholder management, and process adherence – are highly transferable. You could move into broader IT project management, programme management, or even specialise in other areas of cloud operations or governance across various industries.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

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