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United States Businesses The Almighty Buck

Demand and Salaries For Data Scientists Continue To Climb (ieee.org) 66

Data-science job openings are expanding faster than the number of technologists looking for them, says job-search firm Indeed. From a report: Back in August, a LinkedIn analysis concluded that the United States is facing a significant shortage of data scientists, a big change from a surplus in 2015. Last week, job-search firm Indeed reported that its data indicates the shortage is getting worse: While more job seekers are interested in data-science jobs, the number of job postings from employers has been rising faster than the number of interested applicants.

According to Indeed, job postings for data scientists as a share of all postings were up 29 percent in December 2018 compared with December 2017, while searches were only up around 14 percent. "The bargaining power in data science remains with the job seekers," Andrew Flowers, Indeed economist, stated in a press release. [...] Salaries for data scientists are up as well. Average salary in the area surrounding Houston, which topped the 2018 list when adjusted for the cost of living, climbed 16.5 percent since 2017, while the average salary in the San Francisco Bay Area, No. 2 on the adjusted list, jumped 13.7 percent over Indeed's 2017 numbers.

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Demand and Salaries For Data Scientists Continue To Climb

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  • Training (Score:4, Insightful)

    by lazarus ( 2879 ) on Monday January 21, 2019 @04:36PM (#57998406) Journal

    No doubt the big money will be in Data Scientist training programs.

    • It is just "Quants" 2.0. Another bubble that will eventually burst. Try reading about the guy behind Khan Academy for example.

  • Can you make more than $50,000? Asking for a friend...
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Can you make more than $50,000? Asking for a friend...

        Error 501 - Not implemented - No data scientists could be found to answer that question.

        Yeah, they're all too busy making more than $50,000.

    • "Data scientist" isn't a real position, so no.
      • Corollary: real scientists don't need no data. If a theory is any good, it can practically prove itself without any pesky real-world facts.
        • That's kind of the point, all scientists are data scientists - "data scientist" isn't actually something anyone hires for. "Business analyst," "statistician," "business intelligence developer," etc are - but if any of those people tried to claim "sorry, I can't write code because I'm a data scientist" they'd get shitcanned within a day.
  • I keep applying for these jobs, all of which I am completely qualified for, but the computer sees that my college degree is from 1987 and instantly deletes my resume.
    • Stop making shit up. Nobody with a degree from 1987 has their graduation date on their resume.

      • Just interviewed two dudes from this era, both of whom had graduation dates on their resume. One of them had been continually improving his skills and will get an offer (although we probably won't be able to afford him...), another one had spent most of his time having lackeys do the heavy lifting, and won't get an offer because he hasn't stayed up to date and is now scrambling to catch up.

        Ageism is real, I'm sure, but there are also a lot of people that get complacent and expect to keep getting paid even w

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Companies are accumulating massive amounts of data but don't have anyone to tell them what it means. Maybe this will one day result in someone asking why they accumulate the data in the first place.

The unfacts, did we have them, are too imprecisely few to warrant our certitude.

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