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DevOps salaries continued to rise during the pandemic

Covid-19 highlights importance of agile software teams, though women still earned less than men at the top levels
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Credit: Florian Olivo / Nathan Dumlao / Modified by IDG

8 March 2021

DevOps practitioners continued to see their salaries rise, even through the turmoil of the Covid-19 pandemic. That’s according to the 2,243 engineers who divulged their salary range for the 2020 Puppet Devops Salary Report, published today.

As companies have increased their cloud spend and pushed forward with digital initiatives as a result of the pandemic, devops teams have been tasked with keeping core systems running and pumping out new features to users at faster and faster rates – and are being well compensated for doing so.

DevOps professionals are earning more than ever

In the United States, 95% of DevOps practitioners made more than $75,000 a year in salary in 2020, up from 93% in 2019. In Europe and the UK, where salaries are lower across the board, 71% made more than $50,000 a year in 2020, up from 67% in 2019.

 

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The increase was particularly pronounced for top earners. In Japan, the number of respondents earning more than $75,000 rose 25% year-on-year, to 69% in 2020. In the UK, those earning $75,000 (£54,000) or more rose markedly to 74%, up from 57% in 2019. In the United States, 55% of respondents in devops management positions earned between $150,000 and $250,000 in 2020, up from 53% the year before.

Salaries did not rise everywhere, however. The number of respondents earning more than $75,000 declining slightly in Singapore, Germany, Australia, and New Zealand. Practitioners in the Asia-Pacific region and Japan also reported lower salaries on average in 2020, with the number of people earning less than $75,000 at 65%, up from 59% the year before.

“Financial services and technology normally lead the pack, but in 2020 the life science, healthcare, and pharmaceuticals category bumped financial services from the top spot by a noticeable margin,” the report noted. “We wonder if the rush to supply coronavirus vaccines, treatments, and personal protective equipment prompted a sudden industry-wide boost in salaries, bonuses, and hiring bonuses.”

There is a DevOps gender pay gap, too

As with the industry as a whole, there is a gender pay gap in DevOps, with more men earning top salaries than women.

Up to the $75,000-per-year mark, male and female DevOps engineers earn at similar levels, according to the survey. However, of those who earn more than $125,000 a year, 28% are male and 17% female.

The rise of the platform engineer

This year also marked the rise of the platform engineer. As companies look to establish internal platforms to enable faster software delivery, the teams tasked with building and maintaining these platforms have seen their compensation rise steeply.

The report does note that it surveyed a low number of respondents who identified at platform engineers, but those who did reported the highest salaries of all respondents. Platform engineers are the most likely job title to earn more than $150,000 a year and are more likely to earn more than $100,000 than any other title surveyed.

IDG News Service


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