Deploy to
Three Clouds.
On Day One.
Not theory, not sandboxes. You'll provision real AWS EC2 clusters, configure Azure AKS, write Terraform for GCP, and build CI/CD pipelines that ship code to production — all within 90 days.
The 90-Day Multi Cloud DevOps Roadmap
From Linux basics to running a production multi-cloud Kubernetes cluster — every phase ships real infrastructure, not just lecture notes.
Real Infrastructure.
Real Production Ops.
You're not simulating cloud on a free-tier account. You'll provision actual multi-cloud infrastructure, write Terraform that colleagues review, and be on-call for a real Kubernetes cluster — the way day-one at any cloud company works.
You'll Run During the Internship
This isn't a diagram from a textbook. Every node below is a real service you'll provision, connect, monitor, and debug — across three clouds — during your 90 days.
What You'll Build & Operate
13 weeks of hands-on cloud and DevOps engineering — every module ends with a real infrastructure component pushed to your GitHub.
Infrastructure You'll Actually Ship
Real repos. Real cloud bills. Real production deployments that your GitHub shows — not tutorial screenshots.
Your DevOps Internship Journey
Every week ends with a real infrastructure deliverable — from your first container to a three-cloud production cluster you built yourself.
We Don't Stop Till
You're a Cloud Engineer
Cloud engineers are the highest-demand tech role in 2025. Our placement team connects your infrastructure portfolio directly with the companies actively hiring — from TCS Cloud CoE to AWS partner firms and cloud-native startups.
From Zero to Cloud Engineer
Real DevOps alumni. Real infrastructure they built. Real offers that changed everything.
The Terraform repos I built during the internship are literally what I showed the TCS Cloud interviewer on my laptop. A real EKS cluster, a real CI/CD pipeline, real state files in S3. They offered me a cloud engineer role the same day. No other fresher in that room had anything like it.
I had a CS degree but had never touched Kubernetes. In 90 days at Medha I was managing a 3-node EKS cluster with Prometheus monitoring and ArgoCD GitOps. Wipro's cloud team wanted me to join immediately after seeing my GitHub. The internship made my portfolio speak louder than my degree.
I switched from manual QA to DevOps at 28 — everyone told me it was too late. Medha's structured internship gave me real infrastructure experience across AWS, Azure, and GCP. Infosys Cloud hired me at a salary that was 4× my previous job. Age, degree, background — none of it mattered once they saw my work.
Writing Terraform for a real AWS EKS cluster during week 7 was the moment everything clicked. I understood why companies care about IaC — because I had done it. Capgemini's cloud team interviewed me for 45 minutes about my Terraform repo and offered me on the spot. My GitHub was my resume.
The observability project I built — Prometheus, Grafana, and ELK for a live microservices app — was the single most impressive thing in my portfolio. HCL's SRE team said it was the first time a fresher candidate had shown them a real Grafana dashboard with actual metrics. Offer came in 48 hours.
I was a network engineer wanting to move to cloud. The multi-cloud internship was perfect — I already understood networking, and Medha's mentors accelerated me into Terraform and Kubernetes fast. LTI Mindtree placed me in their cloud-native practice. First month on the job, I was already leading Terraform reviews.
Your first Terraform apply.
Your first Kubernetes rollout.
Your first cloud engineer offer.
Applications open for the next Multi Cloud DevOps batch — only 12 seats. Free to apply. We'll call you in 30 minutes.
Free to apply. Merit-based selection. No spam, ever.
