A problem isn't truly solved until it's solved for all. That's why Googlers build products that help create opportunities for everyone, whether down the street or across the globe. As a Technical Program Manager at Google, you'll use your technical expertise to lead complex, multi-disciplinary projects from start to finish. You'll work with stakeholders to plan requirements, identify risks, manage project schedules, and communicate clearly with cross-functional partners across the company. You're equally comfortable explaining your team's analyses and recommendations to executives as you are discussing the technical tradeoffs in product development with engineers. Central Engineering Operations (CEO) defines and operates centralized mechanisms that improve the effectiveness and efficiency of GCP's Product Life-cycle. Within CEO, the Cross-GM Engineering Operation (EngOps) team focuses on reducing the cost and cycle time of delivering mission critical, cross-GCP/TI programs like Horizontals, and Code Yellows. The mission of this Platformization Technical Program Manager is to achieve these goals by increasing GCP/TI adoption of central platforms like CCFE, API Proxy, Pod Spanner. The Platformization TPM will drive increased platform adoption by designing and operating mechanisms to increase platform awareness, remove barriers to platform adoption, and formalize platformization as a core part of GCP/TI's engineering and planning processes. This role will be part of the Cross-GM EngOps team, integrating new mechanisms into existing ones like program intake, program prioritization, semester planning, and roadmap enablement. Google Cloud accelerates every organization's ability to digitally transform its business and industry. We deliver enterprise-grade solutions that leverage Google's cutting-edge technology, and tools that help developers build more sustainably. Customers in more than 200 countries and territories turn to Google Cloud as their trusted partner to enable growth and solve their most critical business problems.