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| Year | # of jobs | % of population |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 299 | 0.00% |
| 2020 | 290 | 0.00% |
| 2019 | 283 | 0.00% |
| 2018 | 258 | 0.00% |
| 2017 | 235 | 0.00% |
| Year | Avg. salary | Hourly rate | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $128,294 | $61.68 | +3.9% |
| 2025 | $123,493 | $59.37 | +1.9% |
| 2024 | $121,183 | $58.26 | +1.6% |
| 2023 | $119,324 | $57.37 | +0.8% |
| 2022 | $118,376 | $56.91 | +1.9% |
| Rank | State | Population | # of jobs | Employment/ 1000ppl |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | District of Columbia | 693,972 | 487 | 70% |
| 2 | South Dakota | 869,666 | 228 | 26% |
| 3 | Massachusetts | 6,859,819 | 1,517 | 22% |
| 4 | Arkansas | 3,004,279 | 588 | 20% |
| 5 | Rhode Island | 1,059,639 | 208 | 20% |
| 6 | Iowa | 3,145,711 | 594 | 19% |
| 7 | Oregon | 4,142,776 | 725 | 18% |
| 8 | Vermont | 623,657 | 101 | 16% |
| 9 | Illinois | 12,802,023 | 1,796 | 14% |
| 10 | New Jersey | 9,005,644 | 1,258 | 14% |
| 11 | New York | 19,849,399 | 2,502 | 13% |
| 12 | California | 39,536,653 | 4,941 | 12% |
| 13 | Virginia | 8,470,020 | 1,058 | 12% |
| 14 | Alabama | 4,874,747 | 603 | 12% |
| 15 | Louisiana | 4,684,333 | 551 | 12% |
| 16 | Oklahoma | 3,930,864 | 489 | 12% |
| 17 | Utah | 3,101,833 | 385 | 12% |
| 18 | Delaware | 961,939 | 119 | 12% |
| 19 | Washington | 7,405,743 | 790 | 11% |
| 20 | Connecticut | 3,588,184 | 381 | 11% |
| Rank | City | # of jobs | Employment/ 1000ppl | Avg. salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cambridge | 4 | 4% | $146,922 |
| 2 | Frankfort | 1 | 4% | $101,447 |
| 3 | Dover | 1 | 3% | $106,901 |
| 4 | Juneau | 1 | 3% | $123,374 |
| 5 | Eden Prairie | 1 | 2% | $105,049 |
| 6 | Lansing | 1 | 1% | $119,371 |
| 7 | Los Angeles | 2 | 0% | $142,853 |
| 8 | Phoenix | 2 | 0% | $130,251 |
| 9 | San Francisco | 2 | 0% | $147,581 |
| 10 | Atlanta | 1 | 0% | $100,496 |
| 11 | Baton Rouge | 1 | 0% | $103,931 |
| 12 | Boston | 1 | 0% | $146,950 |
| 13 | Charlotte | 1 | 0% | $116,681 |
| 14 | Chicago | 1 | 0% | $118,146 |
| 15 | Columbus | 1 | 0% | $102,428 |
| 16 | Dallas | 1 | 0% | $112,981 |
| 17 | Denver | 1 | 0% | $110,228 |
University of Saint Mary
University of Saint Mary
Division of Business and Information Technologies (DBiT)
Dr. Mark Harvey Ph.D.: Resumes are hard. It is very difficult to predict what any employer is looking for on any resume. The "skills" section of a resume is probably not the first thing most employers are looking at. The first consideration is probably education. Those with a bachelor's degree will be sorted first in fields-such as those who have business degrees, or particularly sales and marketing majors. Those with MBAs will be placed on the top. Those who have MBAs and marketing concentrations will likely be valued the most. The second consideration would probably be experience. Someone with several years of experience in business development or sales and marketing will be moved to the top. Someone with a bachelor's degree who has a lot of experience might beat out a fresh MBA. However, MBA plus experience beats almost everything. Someone with an MBA going for an entry-level position with little experience needed will likely beat out all bachelor challengers. For new graduates, getting some kind of internship in sales and marketing can differentiate them from those who do not.
Most hiring managers will probably assume that somebody who has sales and marketing education and/or experience probably has the skills necessary to do the job. An interviewer may probe on specific skills. I'll comment more specifically on other kinds of skills below, but it's also fair to say that a candidate's soft skills should shine in the interview. Simply saying that you have certain skills on a resume doesn't mean that you actually have them.
I think that the best thing a candidate can do is to research the company they hope to work for and tailor their resume to that employer. What does the business do? What kinds of things do you think that development manager is going to do in that particular industry? How do your skills as a candidate match what you guess they're looking for? The more you customize your resume, the better chances you have of resonating with the company. Employers are impressed when you already know something about the job and the industry.