Digital Communication & Multimedia
Information on the businesses and industries that employ Communications graduates and on wages and locations for those in the field.
The average salary for Communications majors is $90,232 and the most common occupations are Other managers, Marketing managers, and Elementary & middle school teachers.
The industry that employs the most Communications majors is uninformed, though the highest paying industry, by average wage, is Nonferrous metal (except aluminum) production & processing.
The average salary for Communications majors is $90,232 and the most common occupations are Other managers, Marketing managers, and Elementary & middle school teachers.
This chart shows the average annual salaries of the most common occupations for Communications majors.
This map shows the public use micro areas (PUMAs) in the United States colored by the average salary of Communications majors.
Note that the census collects information tied to where people live, not where they work. It is possible that Communications majors live and work in the same place, but it is also possible that they live and work in two different places.
The most common occupations for Communications majors, by number of employees, are Other managers, Marketing managers, and Elementary & middle school teachers.
Compared to other majors, there are an unusually high number of Communications majors working as News analysts, reporters & correspondents, Public relations specialists, and Public relations & fundraising managers.
The highest paid occupations by median income for Communications majors are Surgeons, Physicians, and Nuclear medicine technologists and medical dosimetrists.
The number of Communications graduates in the workforce has been growing at a rate of 3.18%, from 2.44M in 2022 to 2.52M in 2023.
The largest single share of Communications graduates go on to work as Other managers (5.1%). This chart shows the various jobs filled by those with a major in Communications by share of the total number of graduates.
The most common industries that employ Communications majors, by number of employees, are uninformed, Elementary & secondary schools, and Colleges, universities & professional schools, including junior colleges.
The highest paying industries of Communications majors, by average wage, are Nonferrous metal (except aluminum) production & processing, Oil & gas extraction, and Pharmaceutical & medicine manufacturing.
The number of Communications graduates in the workforce has been growing at a rate of 3.18%, from 2.44M in 2022 to 2.52M in 2023.
The industry which employs the most Communications graduates by share is uninformed, followed by Elementary & secondary schools. This visualization shows the industries that hire those who major in Communications.
This map shows the public use micro areas (PUMAs) in the United States where there are a relatively high population of Communications majors.
Note that the census collects information tied to where people live, not where they work. It is possible that Communications majors live and work in the same place, but it is also possible that they live and work in two different places.
Demographic information for those who earn a degree in Communications in the United States.
The average age of a person in the workforce with a degree in Communications is 40.8.
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This chart shows distribution of ages for employees with a degree in Communications. The most common ages of employees with this major are 30 and 32 years old, which represent 3.29% and 3.17% of the population, respectively.
The most common degree types held by the working population in Communications are Bachelors Degree, Masters Degree, and Professional degree.
There are a relatively high number of people that were born in Antigua & Barbuda that hold Communications degrees (6.61 times more than expected), and the most common country of origin by total numbers for non-US students earning a degree in this field is Mexico (18,434 degree recipients).