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Telecom manager job growth summary. After extensive research, interviews, and analysis, Zippia's data science team found that:
The projected telecom manager job growth rate is 16% from 2018-2028.
About 82,400 new jobs for telecom managers are projected over the next decade.
Telecom manager salaries have increased 11% for telecom managers in the last 5 years.
There are over 3,612 telecom managers currently employed in the United States.
There are 75,510 active telecom manager job openings in the US.
The average telecom manager salary is $86,535.
| Year | # of jobs | % of population |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 3,612 | 0.00% |
| 2020 | 3,514 | 0.00% |
| 2019 | 3,189 | 0.00% |
| 2018 | 4,211 | 0.00% |
| 2017 | 4,103 | 0.00% |
| Year | Avg. salary | Hourly rate | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $86,535 | $41.60 | +3.3% |
| 2024 | $83,792 | $40.28 | +2.7% |
| 2023 | $81,600 | $39.23 | +2.4% |
| 2022 | $79,705 | $38.32 | +2.5% |
| 2021 | $77,747 | $37.38 | +3.2% |
| Rank | State | Population | # of jobs | Employment/ 1000ppl |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | District of Columbia | 693,972 | 317 | 46% |
| 2 | Massachusetts | 6,859,819 | 858 | 13% |
| 3 | Washington | 7,405,743 | 857 | 12% |
| 4 | Virginia | 8,470,020 | 899 | 11% |
| 5 | Rhode Island | 1,059,639 | 114 | 11% |
| 6 | Utah | 3,101,833 | 296 | 10% |
| 7 | Connecticut | 3,588,184 | 322 | 9% |
| 8 | Vermont | 623,657 | 57 | 9% |
| 9 | California | 39,536,653 | 3,165 | 8% |
| 10 | Illinois | 12,802,023 | 999 | 8% |
| 11 | Maryland | 6,052,177 | 498 | 8% |
| 12 | Oregon | 4,142,776 | 352 | 8% |
| 13 | New Hampshire | 1,342,795 | 107 | 8% |
| 14 | Delaware | 961,939 | 81 | 8% |
| 15 | New Jersey | 9,005,644 | 596 | 7% |
| 16 | Minnesota | 5,576,606 | 384 | 7% |
| 17 | Colorado | 5,607,154 | 371 | 7% |
| 18 | Idaho | 1,716,943 | 119 | 7% |
| 19 | Montana | 1,050,493 | 70 | 7% |
| 20 | Wyoming | 579,315 | 42 | 7% |
| Rank | City | # of jobs | Employment/ 1000ppl | Avg. salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Alpharetta | 1 | 2% | $72,677 |
| 2 | Indianapolis | 1 | 0% | $69,018 |
NCWIT
Loyola University Chicago
Adriane Bradberry: Technology increasingly permeates every aspect of society and provides the foundation for most modern innovation. Young graduates with computing skills will be able to apply to some of the most fastest-growing and highest-paying jobs over the next decade-jobs that are available in nearly every industry, including art, finance, healthcare, and entertainment. Students can establish and develop necessary skills by exploring computing programming apps, taking Computer Science or IT courses (online or at a local community college, if these classes are not offered at school), taking math classes, and joining after-school computing clubs. Graduates who develop these skills will contribute to meaningful work-developing innovative solutions that save lives, solve health problems, improve the environment, and keep us connected.
Peter Dordal Ph.D.: I'm leaving off software developers, and answering about our Information Technology graduates.
IT students entering the business world will need to know how to get the maximum leverage out of business systems. In many cases, this will mean writing their own specialized queries to extract the precise business intelligence needed; general-purpose "canned" queries just won't cut it. They will need a broad understanding of what software can accomplish for the enterprise and how to deploy new software effectively; this applies to software used in the office as well as to software used in manufacturing and shipping. And they will need to understand how to lease storage and computing resources from the cloud to meet not only predictable, long-term demands but also sudden short-term business projects.
Students working in database administration and management will need to be able to manage much larger volumes of data than a few years ago. They will need to be familiar with the great variety of new databases in order to pick the best tool for the job.
Students working in network management will need to be able to ensure that everyone has the bandwidth and server access they need, as those demands expand to include extensive video, low-latency real-time connectivity, and the regular transfer of huge amounts of data.
Students in cybersecurity will need to be fully acquainted with all the recommended best practices. However, they will also have to be able to anticipate and guard against potential new vulnerabilities. "By the book" protection is no longer sufficient.