Configuration Engineer
C2C/1099 candidates can not be considered for this opportunity, W2 only. Summary:The Configuration Engineer plays a mission‑critical role in ensuring environment readiness, configuration accuracy, and build repeatability across a complex, multi‑tier ecosystem. This role is responsible for industrializing the build-and-deployment process that powers the company modernization initiative, ensuring that every environment—from DEV through Prod—remains secure, consistent, and audit‑ready.Focus: Environment Readiness & Build ExecutionExperience & Requirements:Engineering aptitude, primary the boxes will be built manually. Explore ways to build automated lockboxesComfortable with data mapping exercise (SQL skills)Quality focused - verifies the workProcess focusedUnderstand SDLC / data Pipelines and code promotionsDatabase & Mapping LogicConfiguration involves complex data translation that requires strong backend skills.Working with SQL/T-SQL with the ability to write and optimize complex queries for data extraction, normalization, and validation within the migration database.ETL & Logic Implementation having skills in Java or C# to implement transformation logic for calculated fields, code lookups, and business rule validation.Environment Management & QA Integration: The role requires tight integration with testing workstreams to ensure "zero-defect" promotion.Promotion Gates: Understanding of controlled promotion gates and segregation of duties (SoD) within the company internal deployment framework.Defect Triage: Ability to translate test failures into script fixes within an automated "defect-to-script-fix" loop.Rollback Planning: Technical ability to script and validate rollback procedures to reactivate legacy systems if cutover criteria are not met.Preferred Skills within Financial Data StandardsPlatform Expertise: Technical understanding of ImageRPS (target) and legacy platforms like IntegraPay and CheckAlt (sources).Financial Data Formats: Knowledge of X9.37 (ICL) file standards, image profile definitions (resolution, format), and MICR processing rules.