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Job trainer job growth summary. After extensive research, interviews, and analysis, Zippia's data science team found that:
The projected job trainer job growth rate is 8% from 2018-2028.
About 28,900 new jobs for job trainers are projected over the next decade.
Job trainer salaries have increased 6% for job trainers in the last 5 years.
There are over 35,073 job trainers currently employed in the United States.
There are 66,375 active job trainer job openings in the US.
The average job trainer salary is $47,698.
| Year | # of jobs | % of population |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 35,073 | 0.01% |
| 2020 | 33,195 | 0.01% |
| 2019 | 32,612 | 0.01% |
| 2018 | 30,413 | 0.01% |
| 2017 | 29,260 | 0.01% |
| Year | Avg. salary | Hourly rate | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $47,698 | $22.93 | +2.4% |
| 2025 | $46,564 | $22.39 | +0.6% |
| 2024 | $46,306 | $22.26 | +0.8% |
| 2023 | $45,918 | $22.08 | +2.3% |
| 2022 | $44,898 | $21.59 | +1.4% |
| Rank | State | Population | # of jobs | Employment/ 1000ppl |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Iowa | 3,145,711 | 224 | 7% |
| 2 | Connecticut | 3,588,184 | 232 | 6% |
| 3 | Kansas | 2,913,123 | 171 | 6% |
| 4 | Mississippi | 2,984,100 | 166 | 6% |
| 5 | Rhode Island | 1,059,639 | 65 | 6% |
| 6 | Pennsylvania | 12,805,537 | 600 | 5% |
| 7 | Ohio | 11,658,609 | 550 | 5% |
| 8 | Virginia | 8,470,020 | 434 | 5% |
| 9 | Arkansas | 3,004,279 | 152 | 5% |
| 10 | Wyoming | 579,315 | 30 | 5% |
| 11 | Texas | 28,304,596 | 1,006 | 4% |
| 12 | Georgia | 10,429,379 | 458 | 4% |
| 13 | New Jersey | 9,005,644 | 382 | 4% |
| 14 | Michigan | 9,962,311 | 364 | 4% |
| 15 | Tennessee | 6,715,984 | 274 | 4% |
| 16 | South Carolina | 5,024,369 | 194 | 4% |
| 17 | West Virginia | 1,815,857 | 67 | 4% |
| 18 | Alaska | 739,795 | 32 | 4% |
| 19 | Oklahoma | 3,930,864 | 135 | 3% |
| 20 | Vermont | 623,657 | 17 | 3% |
| Rank | City | # of jobs | Employment/ 1000ppl | Avg. salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Marietta | 4 | 7% | $45,450 |
| 2 | Springfield | 6 | 5% | $43,669 |
| 3 | Tampa | 16 | 4% | $47,448 |
| 4 | Tallahassee | 7 | 4% | $45,466 |
| 5 | Atlanta | 10 | 2% | $45,563 |
| 6 | Anchorage | 6 | 2% | $48,390 |
| 7 | Des Moines | 4 | 2% | $35,406 |
| 8 | Fontana | 4 | 2% | $59,369 |
| 9 | Little Rock | 4 | 2% | $38,767 |
| 10 | Oxnard | 4 | 2% | $61,457 |
| 11 | Denver | 8 | 1% | $47,021 |
| 12 | Jacksonville | 6 | 1% | $45,492 |
| 13 | Indianapolis | 5 | 1% | $38,786 |
| 14 | Sacramento | 5 | 1% | $62,313 |
| 15 | Urban Honolulu | 5 | 1% | $67,591 |
| 16 | Boston | 4 | 1% | $63,077 |
| 17 | Oakland | 4 | 1% | $63,917 |
| 18 | Los Angeles | 12 | 0% | $60,505 |
| 19 | Chicago | 6 | 0% | $44,203 |
| 20 | San Diego | 6 | 0% | $58,593 |
University of Alaska Fairbanks
ASQ
Jaunelle Celaire: Learn from everything. Remember every moment is a learning opportunity from everyone around you, no matter their title. Pay attention when things go well and clue in and pay extra attention when they do not; watch how people react to it. Build relationships and network with the people who face problems by being their solution.
ASQ
Edwin Garro: New graduates will need to bring a combination of soft skills and hard skills to the job market. These are times of uncertainty, and the job market needs new professionals who can embrace uncertainty daily. Attributes such as curiosity, creativity, and good communications are so important that the market begs for people who can enjoy a good challenge, come with a unique solution, and communicate a result in a clear way.
Additionally, respect for all people and humility. New graduates should enter the job market willing to know, understand and accept their peers, bosses, and employees (if they start their careers as new managers or supervisors), and that requires a lot of real listening, an open mind, and "not knowing."
For hard skills, technology is a big part of any profession these times. The required skills are way more than simply a passive use of technology, so being good in apps, specialized software, and hardware is just not enough. New professionals do need to know how to speak with algorithms and to write software code; sooner or later, the ability to write even a small piece of code will come in very handy.
Edwin Garro: One good thing about the quality profession is that quality professionals are needed in all fields, which also affords geographic flexibility. We are much more than quality control: we are continuous improvement, root cause analysis, problem-solving, customer service, product and service design, operational and organizational excellence, quality management, quality assurance, project management, service quality, software quality, government quality, and many other things. Quality is an integral part of every job. The term "quality at the source" refers to a job well done, the first time, all the time.