Cloud Architect design board
Cloud Architect labor category proof stack
A credible labor category is more than a title. It should explain what the person does, why the qualifications fit, and how the rate makes sense.
What a Cloud Architect actually does
Designs, migrates, configures, secures, operates, or governs cloud environments.
Cloud architectures, migration plans, landing-zone designs, automation scripts, monitoring setup, and governance playbooks.
How to write the qualifications
Cloud platform experience, architecture skill, automation knowledge, security awareness, and operations discipline.
The minimums should be specific enough to justify the role, but not so inflated that the category becomes hard to staff or hard for buyers to use.
How to think about pricing
Rates should reflect platform depth, architecture responsibility, security complexity, and migration or operations scope.
CALC+ can help with market research, but the final rate story should still connect to the company's commercial practice and the way the role is delivered.
Watch-out
If cloud is central to the work, connect the role to 518210C or a cloud-specific service story.
A clean labor catalog is easier to quote from because every role earns its place.
What this looks like in practice
In actionCloud Architect in a real task order
A Cloud Architect designs the target environment, while a Cloud Engineer configures services and supports migration execution.
A strong labor category page should make it easy to see why the role exists, what it produces, and how it would be staffed on a real order.
Add LCAT noteThe modification should show the before-and-after
If Cloud Architect / Cloud Engineer is being added through eMod, the package should explain the new title, duties, qualifications, SIN support, pricing support, and whether the Services Plus File or service description needs to change.
- Title
- Duties
- Qualifications
- Rate support
- SIN mapping
- Service file impact
Frequently asked questions
Can Cloud Architect / Cloud Engineer appear under more than one SIN?
Sometimes. The role can support multiple SINs when the duties and scope genuinely fit each lane. The description should not become so broad that it stops meaning anything.
Should this role have levels?
Only when the levels change duties, independence, customer exposure, experience, certifications, or technical depth in a way a buyer and reviewer can understand.
What should I check before adding it in eMod?
Check SIN fit, service description impact, pricing support, qualifications, commercial support, and whether the role appears in the Services Plus File or related documents.