Google advertised for a 'conservative outreach' manager for its policy team just 10 days after Donald Trump won the election.

The company is looking for a Washington D.C. based manager to work on its public policy team to help shape 'agendas with policy makers inside and outside government'.

Google posted the job on its career website calling for someone to act as the company's liaison to conservative groups.

Google advertised for a 'conservative outreach' manager to work in Washington D.C. on its public policy team just 10 days after Republican Donald Trump won the election

'You are part organizer, part advocate and part policy wonk as you understand the world of third-party non-governmental advocacy organizations,' the listing reads.

'You can work a room, tell Google's story in an elevator or from a podium and work with partner organizations on shared projects to advance Google's public policy goals.'

The ad suggests Google is working to push its agenda on Trump's administration when they take office, but a spokesman declined to comment, Bloomberg reports.

It comes after Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai told the BBC last month that the U.S. was 'deeply divided' following Trump's presidential win.

Google is looking for a Washington D.C. based manager to work on its public policy team to help shape 'agendas with policy makers inside and outside government', according to the ad (pictured)

'As you can see the country is deeply divided so I tend to look forward,' he said.

'I think we need to figure out how to constructively engage with the new administration and hear the voices of people, as at Google we care about certain values.'

The job advert with Google calls on someone who has direct experience working with conservative groups, advocacy organizations, think tanks and foundations on issue campaigns or public policy.

The 'conservative' job at Google isn't new and the internet giant has hired in-the-know Republicans before, according to Bloomberg. The last policy manager had previously worked on Mitt Romney's campaign in 2012.