Solution Architect - Defence and Government (Basé à London)

Jobleads
Greater London
1 month ago
Create job alert

Solution Architect - Defence and Government

Department:220 - Customer Delivery

Employment Type:Permanent

Location:London


Description

Arqit is a global cybersecurity company delivering world-leading encryption solutions to secure data and communications for enterprises, governments, defence, and critical national infrastructure (CNI). Powered by advanced symmetric key cryptography, the Arqit SKA-Platform offers scalable dynamic encryption that meets modern industry standards and is resilient to future threats, such as those posed by quantum computers. The platform allows devices to seamlessly generate and share secure symmetric encryption keys, reducing the vulnerabilities associated with public key infrastructure (PKI) while operating with zero-trust principles.

Stronger, simpler encryption.

We have an exciting new opportunity for aSolution Architect / Defence & Government Specialistto join our talented team. Our offices are conveniently located close to Westminster, St James Park and Victoria stations and we support considerable flexibility around working from home or remotely. We have a great team culture that gives you the opportunity to innovate, take ownership, and scale new heights in your career as the company grows.


What you'll be doing

As a Solution Architect with a Defence and Government focus, you will take advantage of your deep experience in networking and secure communications to help deliver on the Arqit vision. This is a customer-focused role that will require you to deliver technical presentations and demonstrations, understand customer needs, develop and deliver solutions for live projects, and support pre-sales with active bids and engagements.

This is a great opportunity to join a fast-paced team on their exciting journey into an emerging technology space, working with a wide range of customers such as government agencies, defence primes, major OEM vendors and partner SMEs within the Government and Defence verticals both here in the UK and internationally.

As part of our tightly-knit, collaborative team, you will report to the Director of Professional Services and will work directly with our customers to understand their products and architecture, identify integration points with the Arqit stack, and help our customers integrate our capabilities into their products. You will help them design and implement innovative solutions that help them fully benefit from our products. You will also deliver and develop training, work with our R&D and product teams to help develop our services and be a customer advocate within Arqit.


What we're looking for

  1. You are likely to have experience in secure networks in the context of military or defence.
  2. Strong customer relations and presentation skills.
  3. Excellent time and project management skills.
  4. Superb analytical and problem-solving skills.
  5. Demonstrable experience in setting up secure networks and designing network architecture.
  6. Multi-year experience of rolling out technical projects across multiple platforms.
  7. Professional Service Engineering or similar (such as consultancy) experience.

Essential technical experience:

  1. Strong background in networking and communications, with experience working with routers, firewalls and VPN servers.
  2. Knowledge of network protocols such as IPsec, TLS and WireGuard.
  3. Expertise in cybersecurity principles, practices, and technologies.
  4. Significant experience working with Linux-based operating systems and being comfortable with common command line tools.
  5. Ability to create technical documentation for solutions, such as architecture diagrams, design specifications, and operational procedures.

Useful to have:

  1. Experience with edge computing and deploying small form factor and IoT devices.
  2. Experience setting up secure networks for mobile endpoints (e.g., Android and Windows devices).
  3. Proficiency in cloud platforms such as Azure, AWS, Oracle or Google Cloud.
  4. Experience working with programming languages such as Python, Java or C++.
  5. Sector specific experience with understanding of current and future solution requirements.

Please note: the ability to work in the UK without restriction, and to obtain UK security clearance are both ESSENTIAL.

#J-18808-Ljbffr

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Solution Architect - Defence and Government (Basé à London)

Solution Architect - Defence and Government (Basé à London)

Solution Architect - Defence and Government

Solution Architect - Defence and Government (Basé à London)

Enterprise Solution Architect (Basé à London)

Enterprise Solution Architect (Basé à London)

Get the latest insights and jobs direct. Sign up for our newsletter.

By subscribing you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Contract vs Permanent Quantum Computing Jobs: Which Pays Better in 2025?

Quantum computing, once purely theoretical, has become one of the most dynamic fields in modern technology. Innovations in quantum hardware, quantum algorithms, and quantum-safe cryptography hold the potential to transform everything from drug discovery and supply chain optimisation to secure communications and advanced AI. Across the United Kingdom, start-ups, research labs, and established tech giants are vying for quantum talent, driving up both day‑rates for contractors and salary packages for permanent staff. For professionals with quantum expertise—whether that is in hardware engineering, algorithm design, quantum error correction, or quantum software development—the question arises: Is it better to work as a day‑rate contractor, accept a fixed-term contract (FTC), or pursue a permanent position? Which path offers the most competitive pay by 2025, and which one aligns with long-term career aspirations? This guide explores the unique opportunities, challenges, and earning potential across these three types of quantum computing employment. By examining sample take‑home pay scenarios and broader considerations (like job security, IR35, and career development), you will be better equipped to decide which pathway leads to success in this burgeoning industry.

Quantum‑Computing Jobs for Non‑Technical Professionals: Where Do You Fit In?

Welcome to the Quantum Decade—No Lab Coat Needed Quantum computing is crossing the chasm from physics lab to boardroom. The UK Government’s £2.5 billion National Quantum Strategy (2023‑2033) backs this transition, building the National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) at Harwell and funding dozens of start‑ups such as Riverlane, Quantum Motion and Phasecraft. Analysts at GlobalData estimate that by 2030 the UK quantum sector could support 65,000 jobs and add £5 billion to GDP. Yet a stubborn myth prevails: “Quantum jobs are only for PhDs in superconducting physics.” The reality? Almost 45 % of current quantum‑computing vacancies prioritise commercial, programme or policy skills rather than qubit calibration (UK Quantum Skills Survey 2024). Venture investors now ask founders, “Great chip. Who’s your product manager? Who will navigate export controls?” If your strengths lie in storytelling, governance, project delivery or ecosystem building, quantum needs you—no Dirac notation required. This guide spotlights the fastest‑growing non‑technical roles, the transferable skills you already possess, real career‑switch stories, and an actionable 90‑day plan to land a role in Britain’s quantum future.

Oxford Instruments Quantum‑Computing Jobs in 2025: Your Complete UK Guide to Building the Hardware of the Quantum Era

Before a superconducting qubit ever executes a gate, it must be cooled to 10 millikelvin, shielded from stray photons and measured with sub‑attoamp precision. For more than 65 years, Oxford Instruments (OI) has supplied the cryostats, magnets and nano‑analysis tools that make cutting‑edge physics possible. Today, its NanoScience division powers quantum labs at Google, IBM, IQM and UK‑RI’s National Quantum Computing Centre. From Proteox dilution refrigerators to Triton X dry systems and Teslatron superconducting magnets, OI hardware is the quiet hero behind nearly every major quantum breakthrough. With a global headcount of ~2,200 and annual revenue topping £450 m, Oxford Instruments continues to scale—especially in quantum‑tech manufacturing, field service and R&D. The careers portal lists roles across engineering, physics, software and customer success. Whether you want to design ultra‑low‑noise amplifiers, debug fridge wiring at 20 mK or model spin‑qubit devices, this guide explains how to land an Oxford Instruments quantum‑computing job in 2025.