Haystack

DevOps & Cloud

Hire OpenTelemetry developers

SREs who use OpenTelemetry to stop being locked in to one observability vendor.

3

Markets

UK · DE · US

24h

First shortlist

from kick-off call

14–21

Days to hire

median across stacks

Tailored

Typical mid pay (UK)

Why Haystack

The fastest way to hire OpenTelemetry developers - without the agency tax.

OpenTelemetry is winning as the standard for traces, metrics and logs. The hire that matters can design SDK + collector pipelines that fan out to multiple backends and survive real load.

Haystack's OpenTelemetry pool covers SREs and platform engineers across UK, Germany and US.

What they ship

Production OpenTelemetry work, not tutorials.

  • Instrumentation across polyglot services via OTel SDKs
  • Collector pipelines fanning out to Datadog, Honeycomb and self-hosted backends
  • Sampling strategies that keep cost sane without losing signal
  • Migrations from vendor SDKs onto OTel

Playbook

Hiring OpenTelemetry engineers - the long version

OpenTelemetry specialist or generalist - which should you hire?

The honest answer is: it depends on the half-life of your OpenTelemetry surface area. If your roadmap leans heavily on instrumentation across polyglot services via otel sdks and you expect to keep investing in Collector over the next 18-24 months, a specialist will out-deliver a generalist on day-30 throughput and incident response.

If your team is smaller than ten engineers, or OpenTelemetry is one of three or four core technologies, hire a strong generalist who has shipped OpenTelemetry in anger at least twice. The cross-stack pattern recognition will pay for itself the first time you need to integrate Tempo with another part of the system.

On Haystack we surface both - filtered by whether the candidate self-identifies as a OpenTelemetry specialist and verified against their last two roles. We benchmark live salary data on every offer.

Production patterns the best OpenTelemetry hires bring

A great OpenTelemetry engineer is not the one with the most stars on GitHub - it is the one who has paged at 3am for a OpenTelemetry service they wrote, and changed how they build because of it. Across the platform and infrastructure hires we have placed in 2025-2026, the same patterns keep showing up.

  • Versioned, observable OpenTelemetry releases - feature flags, structured logs and clear rollback paths over hot-patching.
  • Dependency hygiene: pinned versions, automated upgrade PRs and a stated policy on when to adopt new OpenTelemetry majors.
  • Performance budgets agreed with product, with OpenTelemetry profiling baked into CI.
  • OpenTelemetry services instrumented with tracing from day one, not bolted on after the first incident.

Red flags when interviewing OpenTelemetry developers

Every stack has its own pattern of plausible-sounding answers that fall apart in production. With OpenTelemetry, these are the patterns that most often correlate with a six-month regret hire on the employer side.

  • Names every OpenTelemetry feature on the docs page but cannot describe a single trade-off they hit in production with Collector.
  • Treats OpenTelemetry as a checklist of versions rather than a stack of decisions - no opinion on what they would change.
  • Has only built greenfield OpenTelemetry side-projects, never inherited a legacy OpenTelemetry codebase.
  • Blames Collector for past failures without explaining what they shipped to mitigate it.

A sample take-home for OpenTelemetry candidates

When teams ask us how to evaluate OpenTelemetry engineers beyond a CV, we recommend a 90-minute paid take-home that mirrors real work, not algorithm puzzles. The brief below is one we have refined with employers hiring platform and infrastructure teams.

Give the candidate a small, intentionally imperfect OpenTelemetry service that already does instrumentation across polyglot services via otel sdks. Their task is to add a second capability - collector pipelines fanning out to datadog, honeycomb and self-hosted backends - while keeping existing behaviour green. Grade in three parts.

  • Correctness: the new OpenTelemetry feature works under the provided Collector tests, plus one edge case the candidate adds themselves.
  • Engineering judgement: did they refactor or wrap the legacy code? Either is fine - we are listening for the reasoning, not the verdict.
  • Communication: a short README explaining what they would do differently with another week, including any Tempo concerns they spotted.

What to expect in the first 30 days from a Haystack OpenTelemetry hire

By week one, the new OpenTelemetry engineer should have shipped a small change to production - typically a docs fix, a Collector dependency bump or a minor refactor in instrumentation across polyglot services via otel sdks. The goal is to validate the development loop, not to ship anything heroic.

By week two, expect them on the on-call rota in a shadow capacity, pair-programming on at least one feature, and asking pointed questions about why specific OpenTelemetry patterns were chosen. If they are not asking those questions, the hire is going to plateau.

By day 30, they should own one cleanly-scoped slice of the OpenTelemetry surface area, have a public ramp-up document, and be the named reviewer on PRs touching that area. Every Haystack employer gets a structured onboarding template - so you are not reinventing the playbook for each hire.

On Haystack now

OpenTelemetry developers ready to interview

A sample of OpenTelemetry engineers currently active on Haystack across the UK, Germany and US. Tap a profile to start a conversation.

92% match
Vetted
Amelia Hughes

Amelia Hughes

OpenTelemetry Engineer

London, UK
OpenTelemetry61%
OpenTelemetry67%
Collector49%
Tempo53%

7+

Years

£82k

Expects

<2h

Response

// vetted_by_haystack_ai · id: HSTK-1L3DUL

View profile
92% match
Vetted
Jordan Okafor

Jordan Okafor

OpenTelemetry Engineer

Manchester, UK
Collector61%
Tempo55%
Jaeger60%
Honeycomb64%

5+

Years

£68k

Expects

<2h

Response

// vetted_by_haystack_ai · id: HSTK-18C433

View profile
92% match
Vetted
Priya Shah

Priya Shah

OpenTelemetry Engineer

Bristol, UK
Jaeger59%
Honeycomb61%
OpenTelemetry61%
OpenTelemetry64%

9+

Years

£95k

Expects

<2h

Response

// vetted_by_haystack_ai · id: HSTK-18DBPH

View profile
96% match
Vetted
Liam Walker

Liam Walker

OpenTelemetry Engineer

Edinburgh, UK
OpenTelemetry88%
OpenTelemetry74%
Collector72%
Tempo84%

4+

Years

£60k

Expects

<2h

Response

// vetted_by_haystack_ai · id: HSTK-2QAEQ8

View profile
92% match
Vetted
Lena Schneider

Lena Schneider

OpenTelemetry Engineer

Berlin, Germany
Collector96%
Tempo87%
Jaeger80%
Honeycomb82%

6+

Years

€78k

Expects

<2h

Response

// vetted_by_haystack_ai · id: HSTK-40Q9JG

View profile
92% match
Vetted
Maximilian Weber

Maximilian Weber

OpenTelemetry Engineer

Munich, Germany
Jaeger89%
Honeycomb96%
OpenTelemetry90%
OpenTelemetry74%

10+

Years

€105k

Expects

<2h

Response

// vetted_by_haystack_ai · id: HSTK-M8IYEG

View profile

The OpenTelemetry ecosystem your hire should know

3 core · 2 nice to have

Core stack

OpenTelemetryCollectorTempo

Nice to have

JaegerHoneycomb

Where the talent lives

Hire OpenTelemetry developers by city

Explore localised salary benchmarks and top employers in any of our cities.

Lower pay
Higher pay

Hires made on Haystack by teams like

American ExpressAWSDuckDuckGoGoodlordPayPointLeonardoEPAMRaytheonAnswer DigitalAmerican ExpressAWSDuckDuckGoGoodlordPayPointLeonardoEPAMRaytheonAnswer Digital

Interview prep

Sample OpenTelemetry interview questions

Use these across technical and behavioural rounds. Tap a card for what to listen for.

Blueprint

Hiring through Haystack takes days, not months

A repeatable five-step playbook our employers run for every role.

  1. 01

    30-min kick-off

    Day 0

    We capture the brief, scorecard and salary band. No long forms.

  2. 02

    Matches in 24h

    Day 1

    A curated shortlist of vetted candidates lands in your dashboard.

  3. 03

    Interview rounds

    Day 2–10

    We handle scheduling. You focus on the conversation.

  4. 04

    Offer & references

    Day 10–14

    We support both sides through offer and reference checks.

  5. 05

    Onboard

    Day 14–21

    Structured ramp template so your new hire ships in week one.

92%

Offer acceptance

Because every OpenTelemetry candidate has aligned on level, comp and working pattern before you meet, offers via Haystack are accepted 92% of the time.

Leading tech employers use Haystack to hire world-class candidates

Answer Digital

"For anyone in the industry struggling with tech hiring and finding those really niche candidates, I'd highly recommend using Haystack. Ultimately Haystack helped us find great candidates that we couldn't find anywhere else."

Jonny Hiles

Jonny Hiles

Talent Acquisition Lead

Read full case study
Leonardo

"Working with Haystack has helped us widen our brand, it's helped us recruit great people, and it's been an easy thing to do. When we think about our candidate experience and the experience of people in my team, I want that rounded experience and that's what we've seen with Haystack."

Craig Drysdale

Craig Drysdale

VP Talent & Engagement

Read full case study
PayPoint

"I'm really impressed with the candidates that I'm finding on Haystack, I'm looking at them and thinking, 'wow, this looks like a great engineer'. We made multiple hires in our first year. It's been a really nice way to hire tech talent, with a very unique approach."

Marek Kafar

Marek Kafar

Senior IT Recruiter

Read full case study

FAQ

Hiring OpenTelemetry developers - common questions

Ready to hire OpenTelemetry developers?

Book a quick chat with the Haystack team and start matching with vetted candidates this week.