About the job
Join our mission, become part of Doctolib!
We are seeking an Engineering Manager to lead our Automation Platform (AUTOP) team. This team is pivotal in empowering our engineers to build, test, and deploy software with unmatched confidence and speed.
As a member of the Platform organization, AUTOP's core mission is to develop and sustain the automation infrastructure and developer tools that facilitate our engineering teams in delivering high-quality software efficiently. Every feature released at Doctolib—from appointment scheduling to teleconsultation and AI-driven clinical tools—utilizes AUTOP's automation infrastructure. We serve as the platform behind the platform. When product teams achieve faster and safer deployments, it is thanks to the robust systems built by AUTOP.
AUTOP manages critical developer-facing systems, including CI/CD automation, testing infrastructure (unit, integration, E2E, contract, visual regression), ephemeral development environments, release management, dependency management, and developer productivity tools.
Your Role and Responsibilities
In your capacity as Engineering Manager for AUTOP, you will:
Lead and Inspire Your Team
- Build and guide a high-performing team of 6-10 engineers dedicated to enhancing developer productivity.
- Foster an environment where engineers take ownership of outcomes rather than merely completing tasks—where platform adoption and developer satisfaction guide our goals.
- Recruit, mentor, and retain top engineering talent within a competitive landscape.
- Conduct meaningful 1:1s, performance reviews, and career development discussions to help engineers realize their full potential.
Technical Vision and Execution
- Define and lead the technical vision for your team's domain (CI/CD, testing infrastructure, developer environments, or release automation).
- Make impactful technical decisions that harmonize short-term delivery with long-term sustainability and scalability.
- Set high standards for automation, quality, reliability, and security—your systems must be reliable since over 600 engineers depend on them daily.

