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Construction Management Among Highest Paying Jobs

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Been thinking about making upgrades off-site for a change? If you’re considering using your skills and experience towards advancing your career into Construction Management, it might just pay off, heavily.

The following report released by Seek Australia has revealed the top 20 ranking of the country’s highest paying jobs, and while Information Technology dominates the board, Construction Management/Project Management ranks in at number 8 and 9, with an average $125,000 per year.

Source: https://insightsresources.seek.com.au/australias-highest-paying-jobs-2018?tracking=EMC-SAU-eDM-HVisContFeatQ1-14070&utm_campaign=HeDMVisQ1&utm_source=SEEK&utm_medium=eDM&utm_content=ContFeatCTA

The global financial crisis and mining downturn have put the brakes on wage growth over the past decade – so much so that many jobs advertised five years ago were offering higher salaries than what’s on the table now.

However National Australia Bank’s Chief Economist for Markets, Ivan Colhoun, believes wages have bottomed.

He says there are indicators of upward momentum in some sectors and, with employers reporting that it’s getting harder to find suitable labour, it seems wage pressure is beginning to intensify.

Although wages in general are on the weak side, Colhoun says business conditions are strong and there are promising prospects in some sectors for the years ahead.

SEEK’s national salary data highlights those jobs that are attracting the highest salaries, and the industries that are having the biggest impact.

Australia’s Top 20 Highest Paying Jobs

Rank


Industry


Role type


2018 salary


1 Information & Communication Technology Architects $138,144
2 Engineering Management $133,927
3 Information & Communication Technology Management $132,307
4 Mining, Resources & Energy Management $131,462
5 Legal Generalists – In-house $128,988
6 Accounting Strategy & Planning $128,373
7 Accounting Financial Managers & Controllers $126,906
8 Construction Management $126,122
9 Construction Project Management $124,603
10 Insurance & Superannuation Management $124,432
11 Legal Construction Law $124,041
12 Information & Communication Technology Security $122,753
13 Mining, Resources & Energy Mining – Engineering & Maintenance $121,912
14 Consulting & Strategy Management & Change Consulting $121,232
15 Engineering Project Management $120,752
16 Information & Communication Technology Product Management & Development $120,740
17 Information & Communication Technology Programme & Project Management $120,554
18 Information & Communication Technology Team Leaders $119,078
19 Legal Corporate & Commercial Law $118,558
20 Legal Tax Law $118,212

Source: SEEK Salary Report, July 2017 – June 2018 vs July 2016 – June 2017

2013 versus 2018

Perhaps not surprisingly, management roles currently dominate SEEK’s top 20 highest earners list.

Managers involved in Engineering, Information & Communication Technology (ICT) and Mining, Resources & Energy make up three of the top four most highly paid jobs, only being bumped from the top spot by ICT Architects, who report the highest average salary at $138,000.

Managers of finance, construction, insurance and superannuation and consulting also made the list.

The noticeable difference from five years ago is the absence of many of the mining jobs.

In 2013 they held 13 of the top 20 highest paying jobs – including every job in the top six.

“Mining is a risky occupation, jobs are typically in remote areas and it is still quite highly unionised,” explains Colhoun.

In 2018 only miners in management (number four) and engineering and maintenance (number 13) made the cut.

Lawyers made a strong showing this year with four jobs on the list, the highest earnings ($129,000) going to those in generalist / in-house roles (number five).

What salaries are ready to rise?

Although mining remains the highest paying industry in 2018, according to SEEK’s data, advertised salaries are well below the level of five years ago. In 2013, the average salary on offer in the industry was just under $135,000, now it’s hovering just above $116,000.

But Colhoun believes mining still has a lot of potential.

“Commodity prices have recovered so the demand for drilling and exploration has picked up, and NAB’s monthly business survey shows mining is reporting the best conditions of any industry currently,” he says, “…but I don’t think we’ll see it get back to 2012-13 levels – that was a one in a 100 year cycle.”

Strong population growth has been good for services, with a 19% growth rate in advertised salaries for the education sector and a 16% growth for community services jobs over the past five years

The five highest paying industries in 2013 still pay the highest salaries in 2018, however all of them, except ICT, pay less for the role than they did five years ago.

ICT salaries, by contrast, grew by 7.3%, with the average climbing from $97,700 to $104,800 in five years.

Why is ICT king?

ICT jobs feature in the top 20 six times, and it holds both the number one and three spots.

ICT Architects are the nation’s highest earners, followed by ICT Managers in third place. Those working on digital security, product development, project management and team leaders are also well paid.

Robert Beckley is Regional Director for recruitment company Hays.

He says where once IT was a backroom function, it is now top of the agenda for most organisations – because with new technology comes both opportunity and risk.

“On one hand there is the threat of cyber breaches, and on the other hand there is the opportunity to innovate and gain competitive advantage,” says Beckley.

The risks to reputation, and profits, mean IT professionals at the top of their game are highly valued.

Beckley says ICT Architects – the people who design and plan the technology solutions to meet strategic objectives – are not just technical experts, they also have a strong business understanding and great stakeholder management skills.

They’re in high demand due to the number of organisations undergoing significant digital transformations.

The third most highly paid ICT role is cyber security, which comes in at number 12 on the top earners list. They’re making an average $122,700 a year due to the rocketing demand for their expertise as companies store and share more data and hackers develop more sophisticated attacks.

It’s a competitive sector and the biggest mistakes employers make, says Beckley, is being too slow in their interview processes and not having a strong industry network – you can’t wait for candidates to come to you.

“A good ICT candidate actively on the market will have multiple opportunities and if you’re too slow, they’ll be snapped up before you’ve got around to making your offer,” he says.

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