States Online College Job Market
Key Findings
Interactive Tool
States Online College Job Market: Ranking the States
States Online College Job Market: Ranking the States
Disclaimer: Washington, D.C. is excluded from the state-by-state analysis because it is unfair to compare it directly to other states. (Comparing metro regions to states is generally not an apples-to-apples comparison). The primary reason is that D.C. is a central city that draws workers from the neighboring metropolitan areas in Maryland and Virginia, while state labor markets are more diverse and include both urban and rural areas. D.C. also has a high concentration of college jobs due to the presence of the federal government and international organizations. To learn more about Washington D.C. see pages 8,10 and 13 of the full report as well as our methodology here.
Resources
State Online College Job Market: Ranking the Statesย analyzes the online college labor market on a state-by-state basis. We examine the geographic distribution of online job ads for college graduates within industries and occupational clusters, and compare the relative strength of the online college labor market across states.
We estimate that between 60 and 70 percent of job openings are now advertised online, and that the online job market continues to grow each year. Nearly 4 million unique job advertisements are posted online each quarter.