Who gets paid the most?
New study shows sea change in purchasing as titles shift to higher levels, electronic buying rises, and levels of education soar.
Half of the purchasing professionals responding to this year’s salary survey buy or supervise the buying of at least $10 million a year of goods and services annually. And as responsibilities grow, so does compensation.
The average annual salary of respondents to this year’s survey is $64,000, a 4.4% increase ($2,700) over last year’s average ($61,300). This year’s median salary, $56,000, is $3,000 greater than last year’s median ($53,000).
The purchasing professional’s average salary has increased 121% since the first Purchasing salary survey in 1981,and 48% over the past ten years. The average salary reported in the 1991 salary survey was $43,100.
Half of all survey participants receive bonuses as part of their annual compensation, the same as last year. The average bonus among those who are compensated in this way is 10.9% of base pay, again almost identical to last year (11.0%).
One in six (17%) respondents receive stock options. The average value of these options is approximately $91,335 but when those whose stock is worth nothing are excluded the average value is $109,013.
Purchasing’s annual report on compensation—the only such major report conducted—reflects major shifts in purchasing. For example, six of ten respondents buy products electronically, either via the Web or through electronic data interchange. The mix of titles reporting is also changing dramatically. We’re seeing fewer respondents with titles of buyer and purchasing agent and more at the manager and director level, plus all new titles, particularly in e-business categories. The change is hard evidence of the move from tactical to strategic as lower-level buyers are promoted to higher-level jobs or are weeded out.
America’s professional buyers are well educated: three in four have a college degree and 17% have graduate degrees, mostly MBAs. Nearly one in 10 has an engineering or some other technical degree. In 1982, when Purchasing began the salary survey, only 58% of buyers had college degrees.
The salary survey is a story in part of not only how buying is changing, but also how American business is changing. The size of companies is growing, there’s more of a high-tech flair, the southwestern United States is growing in power, and women are making some fractures in the glass ceiling.
While the overall numbers show a continuing significant disparity in pay between men and women, gender ranks only ninth in the factor most likely to indicate pay differential. Ranking higher than gender are supervisory responsibility, dollar responsibility, education, company size, age, commodity bought, experience, and industry.
Additionally, women are slowly climbing the job ladder. In 1983, 40% of women surveyed were at the buyer level. Today, only 25% are buyers, and 26% are purchasing managers. For the first year ever, more than 1% (1.2%) of women are vice presidents. And it is becoming more common to see women in the role of materials manager.
The best compensated commodities for purchasing executives, according to this year’s Salary Survey, include: services ($88,900), information technology ($85,400), machinery/capital equipment ($72,300), transportation/freight ($71,400) and construction ($71,200).
Industries reporting the highest average purchasing salaries this year are: energy/mining/utilities ($80,600); process industries ($75,900); and financial and services ($63,300).
In previous years, purchasing executives working at the corporate level offices of their organizations have reported the highest average salaries when pay is examined according to organizational unit; this year the average salaries for professionals working at the divisional level and corporate level are almost tied. The average salary for purchasing executives working at their company’s divisional offices is $68,900, whereas the average pay for purchasing professionals assigned to corporate headquarters is $68,600. Plant locations offer purchasing men and women the lowest average salary of the three organizational assignments ($54,100).
As we have seen in the past, the age threshold for better-than-average compensation coincides with the average age of the profession. The average age of this year’s survey respondents is 45.5; the average salary among respondents 41 - 50 years old is $66,100. Those in the 51-to-60-year-old range fare slightly better; their average salary is $69,400, but over age 60, the average salary drops to $61,200.
Also consistent with previous salary survey results, longevity bolsters average compensation in the purchasing profession. Average purchasing salaries increase in step with length of employment. Moreover, purchasing executives don’t begin earning higher-than-average salaries until they have been in the profession for more than ten years. Prior to this milestone, average compensation is less than the average for the profession. The median tenure in the field is 14 years, the average is 14.7 years.
Twenty-three percent of this year’s survey participants are Certified Purchasing Managers (C.P.M.s), one percent higher than last year. As we have observed in the past, C.P.M.s have higher average salaries than purchasing professionals who are not certified. This year’s average compensation for purchasing executives with certification is $78,800; the average for those without certification is $59,500 (7% vs. 3% increases over a year ago).
The American Production and Inventory Control Society (APICS) granted C.P.I.M.. certification—certification in production and inventory control management—to 6% of the purchasing professionals responding to this year’s Salary Survey. Materials managers, however, are the most likely to have this certification—16%.
Average purchasing salaries increase in step with company size. The threshold for average and above compensation is $126-500 million in annual sales: purchasing professionals employed by companies having more than $125 million in annual sales report better than average compensation; those working at smaller firms are more likely to receive less than average pay. Overall, a difference of $38,900 separates the average salaries of purchasing executives employed at the largest and smallest companies in this year’s Salary Survey.
The Southwest leads regionally in the U.S. for average compensation ($73,500), followed by New England ($70,200) and the Mid-Atlantic states ($70,000). Purchasing professionals in the Southeast and Southwest experienced one year double-digit increases in average pay (11.0% and 12.4%, respectively), adjusting for lower than average pay hikes the previous year. Although the sample of Canadian respondents actually topped the Southwest in highest average salary (at $87,100), its small size may make this a statistical anomaly. |

AVERAGE SALARY OF JOB TITLE ACCORDING TO INDUSTRY
| Industry
|
Buyer |
Senior
Buyer |
Purchasing
Agent |
Purchasing
Manager |
Asst. Purch.
Manager |
Materials
Manager |
Purch/Matls Director |
VP Purchasing |
| Communications Equipment |
$41,000* |
$50,400 |
$42,800* |
$62,500 |
# |
$ 73,000* |
$ 96,000* |
# |
| Computers & Related Equip. |
$45,700* |
$54,300* |
$50,400* |
$85,700 |
# |
$ 68,300* |
$ 77,500* |
# |
| Equipment/Machinery |
$35,900 |
$54,800 |
$53,600 |
$58,800 |
# |
$ 64,900 |
$ 83,800* |
$209,700* |
| Electronics |
$42,200 |
$53,900 |
$50,200* |
$66,900 |
# |
$ 77,500 |
$134,200 |
$179,000* |
| Energy/Mining/Utilities |
$40,500* |
$74,300* |
$45,400* |
$82,900 |
$62,500* |
$ 85,800* |
$152,000* |
$174,500* |
| Financial, Services |
$41,300* |
$59,500* |
$52,000* |
$64,300 |
# |
# |
$ 83,300* |
$ 92,000* |
| Industrial Controls/Instruments |
$41,200 |
$52,400 |
$49,300 |
$69,200 |
# |
$ 86,000* |
# |
$ 85,000# |
| Miscellaneous Mfg. |
$38,500 |
$52,400 |
$44,900 |
$62,200 |
$56,600 |
$ 60,600 |
$100,200 |
$ 155,200 |
| Primary Metals/Metals Fab. |
$44,600 |
$47,900 |
$39,900 |
$57,900 |
# |
$ 76,500 |
$ 72,200 |
$ 116,200* |
| Process Industries |
$42,700 |
$58,600 |
$56,000 |
$78,700 |
$62,500* |
$ 71,600 |
$ 97,700 |
$150,100 |
| Transportation/Automotive |
$43,300 |
$53,000 |
$50,900 |
$68,600 |
$71,500* |
$ 79,000 |
$100,800 |
$110,200* |
| Wholesale/Service Ctrs |
$40,000 |
$55,200* |
$47,600 |
$64,200 |
$49,000* |
$ 60,000* |
$ 71,200* |
$136,500* |
AVERAGES BY COMMODITY
| Industry
|
|
- - - - - Average Salary - - - - - |
- Highest Salary - |
| |
Respondents |
All |
Men |
Women |
Men |
Women |
| Metals |
425 |
$60,700 |
$65,300 |
$46,300 |
$264,000 |
$100,000 |
| Chemicals/Plastics |
194 |
$66,400 |
$71,900 |
$53,000 |
$230,000 |
$114,000 |
| Electronics |
173 |
$59,000 |
$63,200 |
$51,600 |
$204,000 |
$163,000 |
| Packaging |
101 |
$69,800 |
$76,200 |
$50,400 |
$368,000 |
$120,000 |
| Mechanical Components |
254 |
$60,300 |
$65,300 |
$46,000 |
$380,000 |
$100,000 |
| Machinery, Capital Equipmt |
50 |
$72,300 |
$77,500 |
$58,800 |
$216,000 |
$125,000 |
| MRO/Utilities |
153 |
$56,400 |
$63,300 |
$41,200 |
$150,000 |
$115,000 |
| Office Equipment/Supplies |
38 |
$67,400 |
$79,900 |
$46,000 |
$209,000 |
$121,000 |
| Transportation, Freight |
11 |
$61,800 |
$65,500 |
# |
$ 86,000 |
# |
| Services |
52 |
$88,900 |
$91,000 |
$84,700 |
$265,000 |
$153,000 |
| Information Technology |
36 |
$85,400 |
$94,900 |
$67,600 |
$225,000 |
$138,000 |
| Construction |
32 |
$71,200 |
$75,400 |
*$48,600 |
$203,600 |
$ 65,000 |
| Raw Materials (N/S) |
37 |
$63,800 |
$68,400 |
$51,600 |
$162,000 |
$100,000 |
SALARY VS INDUSTRY
| |
iIndustry
|
Average Salary |
Number of Respondents |
| |
Communications Equipment |
$56,800 |
54 |
| |
Computers and Related Equipment |
$63,500 |
43 |
| |
Equipment/Machinery |
$58,200 |
190 |
| |
Electronics |
$67,500 |
110 |
| |
Energy/Mining/Utilities |
$80,600 |
50 |
| |
Financial, Services |
$73,300 |
39 |
| |
Industrial Controls/Instruments |
$58,200 |
64 |
| |
Miscellaneous Manufacturing |
$61,600 |
466 |
| |
Primary Metals and Metals Fabricating |
$58,600 |
152 |
| |
Process Industries (Chemicals/Paper/Food) |
$75,900 |
214 |
| |
Transportation/Automotive |
$64,100 |
207 |
| |
Wholesale, Durable Goods/Service Centers |
$60,600 |
89 |
| |
Multiple Sectors |
$54,900 |
21 |
SALARY VS JOB TITLE
| Title |
# |
- - - - - Average Salary - - - - - |
- Highest Salary - |
| |
Respondents |
All |
Men |
Women |
Men |
Women |
| Buyer |
236 |
$ 40,600 |
$ 45,600 |
$ 36,200 |
$100,000 |
$ 72,000 |
| Senior Buyer |
189 |
$ 54,200 |
$ 56,800 |
$ 49,000 |
$128,000 |
$ 87,000 |
| Purchasing Agent |
254 |
$ 48,200 |
$ 52,100 |
$ 40,000 |
$380,000 |
$ 80,000 |
| Purchasing Manager |
599 |
$ 66,300 |
$ 68,400 |
$ 58,400 |
$203,000 |
$138,000 |
| Asst. Purchasing Manager |
17 |
$ 60,600 |
$ 63,200 |
$ 57,500 |
$101,000 |
$120,000 |
| Materials Manager |
124 |
$ 68,900 |
$ 71,400 |
$ 63,000 |
$150,000 |
$104,000 |
| Purchasing/Mat’ls Director |
134 |
$ 96,500 |
$ 99,700 |
$ 73,400 |
$215,000 |
$153,000 |
| VP Purchasing/Supply/CPO |
55 |
$143,800 |
$152,000 |
*$ 87,500 |
$368,000 |
$163,000 |
| Other |
129 |
$ 69,200 |
$ 75,100 |
$ 55,900 |
$264,000 |
$130,000 |
TOTAL RANGE OF SALARIES BY JOB TITLE
| Title: |
Respondents |
Average |
Median |
Most
Frequent/# |
Lowest |
Highest |
| Buyer |
236 |
$ 40,600 |
$ 39,000 |
$ 40,000/16 |
$20,000 |
$100,000 |
| Senior Buyer |
189 |
$ 54,200 |
$ 53,000 |
$ 45,000/13 |
$28,000 |
$128,000 |
| Purchasing Agent |
254 |
$ 48,200 |
$ 45,000 |
$ 42,000/12 |
$20,000 |
$380,000 |
| Purchasing Manager |
599 |
$ 66,300 |
$ 63,000 |
$ 60,000/27 |
$20,000 |
$203,000 |
| Asst. Purchasing Manager |
17 |
$ 60,600 |
$ 58,000 |
$ 53,000/3 |
$19,000 |
$120,000 |
| Materials Manager |
124 |
$ 68,900 |
$ 66,000 |
$ 50,000/9 |
$28,000 |
$150,000 |
| Purchasing/Materials Dir. |
134 |
$ 96,500 |
$ 93,000 |
$ 105,000/6 |
$29,000 |
$215,000 |
| VP Purchasing/Supply/CPO |
55 |
$143,800 |
$121,000 |
$ 240,000/3 |
$35,000 |
$368,000 |
| Other |
129 |
$ 69,200 |
$ 60,000 |
$ 45,000/7 |
$17,000 |
$264,000 |
|