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Fedramp Compliance Program Jobs (NOW HIRING)

Prior role standing up CMMC or FedRAMP compliance programs * Previous P&L or operational budgeting responsibility * Experience in creating and implementing complex planning models If you've built ...

Prior role standing up CMMC or FedRAMP compliance programs * Previous P&L or operational budgeting responsibility * Experience in creating and implementing complex planning models If you've built ...

OR · On-site

$93K - $123K/yr

About the Role The FISMA/FedRAMP Senior Consultant works independently and collaboratively to ... compliance programs. Combining experienced auditors and audit management technology, A-LIGN ...

OR · On-site

... compliance programs. Combining experienced auditors and audit management technology, A-LIGN ... A-LIGN is the number one issuer of SOC 2 and HITRUST and a top three FedRAMP assessor. To learn ...

GRC Technical Program Manager

Mclean, VA

$130K - $168K/yr

Core Responsibilities * 3+ years of experience operating security or compliance programs aligned to FedRAMP or NIST 800-53. * 2+ years leading internal or external audits end-to-end, either as audit ...

Experience conducting security assessments and supporting cybersecurity compliance programs. * Experience with FedRAMP, NIST 800-53 Rev. 5, DoD RMF, and cloud security requirements. * Experience ...

Familiarity with FEDRAMP compliant data architecture platform providers such as Databricks and Snowflake is desired. RESPONSIBILITIES AND DUTIES - Program Manager | Human Capital Technology Support ...

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Fedramp Compliance Program information

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$98.9K

$207.5K

How much do fedramp compliance program jobs pay per year?

As of Jun 14, 2026, the average yearly pay for fedramp compliance program in the United States is $98,949.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $61,500.00 and $115,000.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What is a FedRAMP Compliance Program job?

A FedRAMP Compliance Program job involves managing and ensuring that cloud service providers (CSPs) follow the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) requirements. This includes coordinating security assessments, working with Third-Party Assessment Organizations (3PAOs), and maintaining continuous monitoring to meet federal cybersecurity standards. Professionals in this role collaborate with internal teams and government agencies to navigate the authorization process, remediate security findings, and ensure compliance with evolving regulations. They also develop policies, documentation, and risk management frameworks to support a CSP’s adherence to FedRAMP guidelines.

What are the typical daily responsibilities of someone managing a FedRAMP Compliance Program?

As a FedRAMP Compliance Program manager, your daily tasks often involve coordinating security assessments, reviewing documentation for accuracy, and ensuring continuous monitoring requirements are met. You’ll work closely with IT, security, and legal teams to interpret federal regulations and implement necessary controls in cloud environments. Regular communication with cloud service providers, third-party assessment organizations, and federal agencies is common to address compliance gaps and maintain certification status. This role requires diligent tracking of project timelines and staying current with evolving FedRAMP requirements. Being proactive and detail-oriented can help you successfully navigate the unique challenges of federal cloud security compliance.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive in the Fedramp Compliance Program position, and why are they important?

To excel in a FedRAMP Compliance Program role, you need a solid understanding of IT security frameworks, risk management, and compliance standards, often backed by a degree in information security or related certifications such as CISSP, CISA, or FedRAMP Assessor. Familiarity with cybersecurity tools, GRC (Governance, Risk, and Compliance) platforms, and cloud security technologies is typically required. Strong project management, attention to detail, and excellent communication skills help in coordinating with stakeholders and interpreting complex requirements. These competencies are essential to ensure cloud service providers meet federal compliance standards and successfully navigate the FedRAMP authorization process.

More about Fedramp Compliance Program jobs
What are the most commonly searched types of Fedramp Compliance Program jobs? The most popular types of Fedramp Compliance Program jobs are:
Infographic showing various Fedramp Compliance Program job openings in the United States as of June 2026, with employment types broken down into 2% As Needed, 82% Full Time, 10% Part Time, 2% Temporary, and 4% Contract. Highlights an 64% Physical, 5% Hybrid, and 31% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $98,949 per year, or $47.6 per hour.
Director / Senior Director of Compliance

Director / Senior Director of Compliance

ID.me

Mountain View, CA

Other

PTO

Posted 4 days ago


ID.me rating

6.3

Company rating: 6.3 out of 10

Based on 6 frontline employees who took The Breakroom Quiz

166th of 190 rated software companies


Job description

Director / Senior Director of Compliance

Location: Mountain View, CA (on-site) Reports to: VP of GRC / Deputy CISO Department: Security - Governance, Risk, and Compliance

Why This Role Exists

id.me operates one of the most highly regulated identity verification platforms in the country. Our compliance programs span FedRAMP, NIST 800-63 (Rev 3 and Rev 4), SOC 2, ISO 27001, IRS Pub 4812, and a growing portfolio of federal and commercial audit obligations.

We're looking for a compliance leader who believes that compliance done right is a byproduct of well-engineered systems - not a parallel bureaucracy. The right person will transform how compliance operates: from manual evidence gathering and heroic individual effort to automated, continuous, and scalable.

This is not a role for someone who wants to maintain the status quo. If your instinct when a deadline is at risk is to throw more hours at it instead of asking "why isn't this automated?", this isn't the right fit.

What You'll Own
  • Full compliance portfolio: FedRAMP (Moderate), SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, IRS Pub 4812, NIST 800-63 Rev 3/Rev 4 (Kantara), and emerging frameworks as they apply.
  • People leadership: Build, grow, and lead a compliance team. You are accountable for your team's development, career growth, and well-being - not just their output.
  • Automation strategy: Drive aggressive control consolidation and evidence automation. Reduce the total number of operated controls. Make evidence collection a byproduct of the work people already do - not a separate exercise.
  • Cross-functional partnership: Serve as the compliance interface to Engineering, Product, Legal, and Privacy. Build trust through partnership, not gatekeeping. Your success is measured by how easily teams work WITH compliance, not how thoroughly you block them.
  • Audit readiness: Maintain continuous audit readiness across all programs. Manage 3PAO relationships, agency engagements, and external assessors.
  • Risk integration: Partner with the Risk team to feed compliance findings into a unified cyber risk register. One evaluation loop - not fragmented reviews from five different teams.
What We're Looking ForMust Have

People-first leadership. You have built and grown compliance teams. You hold regular 1:1s, create career development plans, and invest in making your people better - not just getting work done. You delegate effectively and build systems where knowledge survives individual absence. If you're "too busy" for your team, you're not operating at the right altitude.

Communication clarity. You give crisp, direct answers to strategic questions. "What does success look like in 30 days?" gets a two-sentence answer, not a monologue. You write clearly. You adjust your communication to your audience - board members, engineers, auditors, PMs - without losing precision.

Partnership over gatekeeping. Engineering and Product are your customers, not your adversaries. You default to "how do we make this work safely?" not "this is not allowed." When you say no, you explain why in terms the other person values and offer an alternative path. You build relationships with stakeholders proactively - you don't wait for escalations.

Automation conviction. You believe compliance should be engineered, not administered. You champion tooling that automates evidence collection, continuous monitoring, and control validation. You actively resist the instinct to throw manual labor at deadline pressure. You think more like an engineering director than a traditional compliance director - systems, leverage, elimination of toil.

Self-directing execution. You operate with minimal management. You identify what needs to happen, build a plan, execute it, and communicate upward proactively. You don't wait to be told. You manage up effectively - your leadership always knows where things stand without having to ask.

Strong Preference
  • Experience with FedRAMP (Moderate or High), NIST 800-53, or equivalent federal compliance frameworks
  • Experience building or significantly improving compliance automation (evidence pipelines, GRC platform integrations, continuous monitoring)
  • Familiarity with GRC platforms (LogicGate, Drata, Vanta, or similar) - as a power user who pushes the platform, not just a form-filler
  • Comfort with AI/ML tools for compliance workflows (we use Claude, Gemini, and custom MCP integrations extensively)
  • Experience operating in a growth-stage or mid-stage tech company where you had to build, not just maintain
Nice to Have
  • CISA, CISSP, CRISC, CISM, or similar certifications
  • Experience with Kantara / NIST 800-63 identity assurance frameworks
  • SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001 audit management experience
  • Prior experience managing 3PAO and external assessor relationships
What Success Looks Like

First 90 days:

  • You know every active compliance program, its current state, and its next milestone.
  • You've had 1:1s with every team member and have a written development plan for each.
  • You've met your key cross-functional partners (ProdSec, SecOps, IT, Legal, Privacy, Engineering VPs) and they describe you as easy to work with.
  • You've identified the top 3 manual processes that should be automated and have a plan to address them.

First 6 months:

  • At least one major evidence collection workflow is automated end-to-end.
  • Total operated controls are reduced (consolidated, not just documented differently).
  • Your team can cover for each other on PTO without disruption - no single points of failure.
  • External audit partners describe working with id.me as improved.
  • Engineering teams proactively engage compliance early in project planning - not as a last-minute gate.

First year:

  • Compliance is a byproduct of operational work, not a parallel bureaucracy.
  • Continuous monitoring runs without manual intervention for the majority of controls.
  • You've built strategic relationships with key regulatory bodies and industry peers.
  • Your team's velocity is measurably higher than when you started - with evidence to show it.
About the Environment
  • AI-first culture. The CISO's 2026 goal: "It is SAFE for EVERYONE to use every feature of any company-provisioned AI tool for any task." We practice what we preach - our compliance stack uses Claude, custom MCP servers, and automation pipelines extensively. You will be expected to embrace this.
  • High risk appetite, low risk tolerance. We move fast and accept risk deliberately. "Because FedRAMP" is not accepted as a justification for blocking the business. If something must be restricted, we enforce it technically - not with policy documents nobody reads.

Base Salary: $230,000-$320,000
Bonus: 20-25%, depending on level
Equity: Competitive