IT salaries for managers economy-leading in 2024, down for juniors

By Luu Quy   December 17, 2024 | 09:19 pm PT
IT salaries for managers economy-leading in 2024, down for juniors
A software developer works on his laptop. Photo by Shutterstock/ProStockStudio
IT managers in Vietnam earn a median salary of VND52 million (US$2,048), the highest in any sector, while pay for employees with less than a year’s experience has declined.

Recruitment platform TopCV released its 2024 annual labor market report, highlighting that while demand in the IT industry shows "signs of slowing," it remains a critical sector and with a talent shortage offering significantly higher salaries than others.

The report, based on a survey of 3,000 businesses and workers and analyses of 300,000 job postings as of late October, revealed a 1% drop in demand for IT professionals from last year. But experienced and highly skilled candidates remained highly sought after.

This trend was reflected in salaries. Employees with less than one year of experience earned a median salary of VND11 million, down from VND15 million in 2023, while team leaders and those with four or more years of experience earned VND35 million. For managers and department heads, salaries surged to VND52 million, a nearly 30% increase.

The salary figures are based on median values, which represent the midpoint in a range and offer a clearer picture than averages when salaries vary significantly.

The IT and software industry reclaimed the top spot in this year’s salary rankings. In 2023 the insurance industry had led with a median managerial salary of VND50 million, VND10 million higher than in the IT industry. This year managerial salaries in most other sectors were VND26-39 million, significantly lower than in IT.

But despite the high salaries, TopCV noted, there were challenges in the IT recruitment market primarily due to the limited candidate pool. Around 55% of surveyed businesses reported a shortage of highly skilled professionals, while 49.7% expressed readiness for intense talent competition and willingness to offer attractive benefits to secure top employees.

On the employee side, "job-hopping" remains prevalent, with 34.1% of IT workers citing lower pay compared to competitors as the main reason for leaving. Another 29.5% pointed to a lack of career advancement opportunities, and 19.5% said their values no longer aligned with those of the company leadership.

But the report found that "changing jobs no longer guarantees higher income for IT professionals," with fewer than 10% reporting salary increases of 3-5% after switching roles. Job seekers also faced new challenges like requirements to know a second language, multitask and acquire new skill sets.

 
 
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