Looking at the results of Mercer Benchmark Database and 2023 Canada Turnover
For a long time, when you thought about “Hot Jobs” or jobs that were in demand, the list typically included many high-tech jobs. The introduction of a new programming language or emerging digital capability sent IT Managers hurrying to the job boards to try to secure experts for their teams. Healthcare also has consistently had roles on the list — specialty jobs, such as nursing, come and go as the supply and demand fluctuates.
But, within the last several years, in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and various supply-chain constraints, other jobs have become in high demand. We’ve seen a lot of roles found in warehouses, shipping, and manufacturing join the jobs in-demand lists alongside more technical jobs.
Defining high demand job
Just what do we mean when we say a job is in high demand; how do we measure that? There are a couple of things that we regularly review as indicators:
- Job postings/openings: Of course, active recruiting focused more heavily on one job family is a clear indicator of the demand for particular talent. Job board and search firm statistics are a source of information to understand where there’s an increase in hiring.
- Job outlook predictions: Various analyst groups and other organizations make predictions about which jobs will grow and be in higher demand in the coming years.
- Increases in pay: Higher than average increases in pay year over year can be an indicator that a job is in high demand. It typically means that an employer has to pay more to hire someone or make pay adjustments to retain employees.
- Turnover: If certain industries or jobs are seeing higher than usual voluntary turnover, meaning employees are choosing to leave a job, then it’s possible that there will be some high-demand jobs resulting from this.
With Mercer’s vast library of surveys and reports, we’re in a great position to take a look beyond what’s publicly available (i.e., job boards and BLS) and talk about year-over-year pay increases and turnover. Let’s take a look!
Highest year-over-year pay increases
While the most recent version of our Compensation Planning Survey indicates that annual increase budgets are down and other pay adjustments are slowing, they are still happening. Perhaps the activity is just more strategic.
We can take a look at year-over-year changes from Mercer Benchmark Database to see which jobs are seeing higher base pay increases than others. When looking at the data from the same organizations and same incumbents from 2022 to 2023, the number of jobs that show a year-over-year increase of more than 5% has increased by 3 times. Below are the jobs with the highest year-over-year increases for incumbents, indicating they received some kind of adjustment, such as an above average merit/annual increase, market adjustment, or equity adjustment. Regardless of the particular type of increase, employers channeled more money toward these roles than others.
Top 10 jobs – same incumbent, same job base salary movement from 2022 to 2023 (median) |
Heavy Equipment Mechanic - Senior Para-Professional (S3) |
10.9% |
Data Science - Manager (M3) |
10.2% |
Mechanical Engineering - Entry Professional (P1) |
10.0% |
Electrical Engineering - Entry Professional (P1) |
10.0% |
Warehouse Shipping & Receiving - Experienced Para-Professional (S2) |
9.7% |
Civil/Construction/Structural Engineering - Entry Professional (P1) |
9.5% |
General IT Applications Development - Senior Manager II (MS) |
9.2% |
Manufacturing Industrial Optimization Engineering - Manager (M3) |
9.1% |
Manufacturing Quality Assurance - Experience Para-Professional (S2) |
9.0% |
Civil/Construction/Structural Engineering - Experienced Professional (P2) |
8.8% |
Note: Represents the same organizations participating in the survey two years in row, matching the same employees to the same job year over year. Jobs with less than 10 organizations in the sample were excluded.
What jobs are employees choosing to leave?
Turnover is another indicator of jobs that are in high demand. If you can’t keep people in particular jobs, then you have a problem. Are those the roles that you really need to keep filled to be successful? What happens once you find people to fill these jobs but they don’t stay?
The 2023 Canada Turnover survey gives us some insight into where there are some trouble spots. Overall, in Canada, the average voluntary turnover for the last calendar year was 15.5%. However, certain industries have higher or lower turnover. Retail & Wholesale have voluntary turnover at almost 40% while Chemicals and Energy have the lowest turnover rates, at less than 10%.
Within those numbers, we can get a better picture by looking at what employee category is leaving voluntarily. It does vary by industry. For example, Chemicals, which has a low average turnover rate overall but had much more difficulty retaining Para-professional “White Collar” (23.0% voluntary turnover). Interestingly, Retail and Wholesale is also experiencing high voluntary turnover with their Para-professional “White Collar”, 26.2%. However, they also have a voluntary turnover rate of 23.9% for their Para-professional “Blue Collar” jobs.
In the same survey, we asked the more than 800 participants whether they had difficulty hiring or retaining employees in certain roles – 50% of them indicated that they do. For all but a few industries, either “IT, Telecom & Internet” or “Engineering and Science” topped their list of in-demand jobs.
Are you struggling to keep employees in some of these jobs? If so, we’re here to help. Making sure your pay is competitive and your total rewards package meets the needs of your employees is just one piece of the puzzle. Reach out to us at 855-286-5302 or surveys@Mercer.com. We’d love to share our thoughts.