Article: Firms are paying more for talent. That's a good thing for women

Compensation & Benefits

Firms are paying more for talent. That's a good thing for women

More than double the number of women entered the higher income level of $150,000-plus than the year before, reveals the 2021 DevOps Salary Report by Puppet.
Firms are paying more for talent. That's a good thing for women

Women are steadily increasing their earning status across regions, roles, and industries and more workers are moving into higher income levels than at any time in the past three years, reveals findings of 2021 DevOps Salary Report by Puppet, the industry standard for infrastructure automation. 

The salary gap between male and female practitioners is closing within higher income brackets, as women make a steady, potentially long-term shift into higher earnings. More than double the number of women entered the higher income level of $150,000-plus than the year before (17% in 2021 compared to 8% in 2020 and 10% in 2019), says the Puppet report, which surveyed more than 2,600 technology professionals globally.

In addition, companies with high-evolution DevOps are compensating their employees at the highest level, with practitioner salaries doubling and manager salaries nearly tripling from 2020 to 2021. The share of those earning more than $150,000 at high-evolution firms more than doubled to 20% in 2021 from 8% in 2020. 

As per the report the United States remains the leader when it comes to paying the highest salaries. 

Pandemic-driven digital transformation efforts have directly impacted the DevOps landscape. These transformational enterprise shifts have forced companies to offer more competitive compensation and invest in top talent to ensure sustainable success. 

The reports adds that while there was significant global growth in DevOps salaries, the Asia Pacific (APAC) lags behind other regions in the highest salary brackets.

Only 4% of managers and practitioners combined earned more than $150,000 in 2021, compared to 6 % in Europe/UK., 12% in Canada, and 35% in the United States. However, when it comes to salaries of $100,000-plus, Asia Pacific is slightly ahead (33%) of Europe/UK (24%) which is consistent with findings from 2019 and 2020.

Respondents working in financial services earned the highest salaries, followed by those working in healthcare and technology. There have been substantial increases across all sectors, with financial services nearly doubling from 16% in 2020 to 29% in 2021.

“As APAC markets such as Singapore and Australia continue to become synonymous with innovation and transformation, organisations must digitally transform and modernise faster than ever. The survey findings show that companies must keep pace with the competitive compensation globally in order to attract and nurture DevOps talent and critical skills in great demand,” said Rachel Lew, Senior Director, APAC, Puppet.

“It is exciting to see more women increasingly enter higher income brackets, especially in DevOps, which has historically been a male-dominated area.The gradual decrease in a wage gap hopefully points to a long-term shift in pay equity. As a DevOps leader, I am inspired by this progression and I look forward to seeing more equality in wages and gender parity across DevOps overall,” added Abby Kearns, chief technology officer at Puppet. 

Read full story

Topics: Compensation & Benefits

Did you find this story helpful?

Author

QUICK POLL

How do you envision AI transforming your work?

People Matters Big Questions on Appraisals 2024: Serving or Sinking Employee Morale?

LinkedIn Live: 25th April, 4pm