Is Management, Product & Project a Good Job Market in Salt Lake City-Murray, UT?
Produced by Callings.ai on April 21, 2026
Executive Verdict
Market rating: competitive | Confidence: Medium
Salt Lake City-Murray is still a workable market for Management, Product & Project roles, but it is a selective one rather than an easy one. The metro unemployment rate was 3.9% in January 2026, below the national 4.3% in March 2026, and we still observed more than 150 postings across more than 100 companies over the last 90 days.[13][12][1] The harder part is conversion: local employment was down -1.5% year over year, the local unemployment rate was up 21.9% year over year, and about 50% of current postings skew senior while only about 10% skew entry level.[18][19][20] Your best odds are in delivery-heavy and domain-heavy roles tied to professional services, healthcare, finance, construction, and engineering, not in generic remote tech PM searches, especially with local information employment down -7.8% year over year and about 65% of postings on-site.[5][6][7][3][8][21]
Best positioned: Candidates with 4-8+ years of project, program, or product experience, measurable cross-functional results, and willingness to work on-site in healthcare, fintech, construction, engineering, or lab environments have the best odds right now.[21][3][22]
Main caution: The biggest mistake is chasing only remote product roles; only about 20% of local postings are remote, and pure information-sector hiring looks weaker than other local demand pockets.[21][8]
What Changed Recently
- Metro conditions cooled into early 2026: Salt Lake City-Murray unemployment reached 3.9% in January 2026, employment level was down -1.5% year over year, and unemployment level was up 21.1% year over year.[19][18][27]: That usually shows up as longer searches and more competition from experienced local candidates, even before occupation-specific screening.
- Growth is coming more from professional and business services (+3.1%), education and health services (+3.7%), and financial activities (+2.8%) than from the information sector, which was down -7.8% year over year in January 2026.[5][6][7][8]: You should bias your search toward delivery and transformation work inside those stronger sectors instead of relying on pure software-product demand.
- Over the last 90 days we observed more than 150 postings across more than 100 companies, with hiring fragmented rather than dominated by one employer and no clear directional trend in the sample.[1][2]: This is not a market where one big application blast to a few brand-name employers will be enough; breadth and sector targeting matter.
- Late-March WARN notices hit ProFrac Services, LLC, Genpak, and Crimson Heights, while Oracle's March 31 local tech impacts added another caution flag for software-adjacent roles.[10][9]: Even when cuts are not occupation-specific, they can increase the pool of experienced applicants competing for local management and project openings.
- National hiring remains selective: U.S. job openings were 6882 thousand in February 2026, hires were down -9.1% year over year, and quits were down -13.9% year over year.[28][11][29]: That combination usually means employers are still posting roles but moving carefully, with fewer people leaving jobs and fewer replacement openings.
What This Means for You
Entry-Level Candidates
Difficulty: Hard. The market is senior-heavy, and employers appear to want evidence of delivery, stakeholder handling, and business context rather than just coursework.
Best target: PMO analyst, project coordinator, implementation coordinator, or operations-project roles in healthcare, construction, labs, or business services.
Biggest mistake: Applying only to product manager titles without a portfolio that proves prioritization, metrics thinking, and cross-functional execution.
Next step: Build one concrete case study that shows timeline planning, risk tracking, KPI reporting, and a decision you made with imperfect information.
Mid-Career Candidates
Difficulty: Moderate but competitive. There is real demand, but employers seem to be choosy and want candidates who can ramp fast in a domain.
Best target: Senior project manager, program manager, delivery manager, implementation lead, or product operations roles tied to healthcare, fintech, engineering, or infrastructure.
Biggest mistake: Using a generic PM resume that lists responsibilities instead of outcomes such as launch timing, revenue impact, vendor control, cycle-time reduction, or risk avoided.
Next step: Split your search into two lanes: delivery/program roles and product-facing roles, then tailor your resume and interview stories to each lane separately.
Career Switchers
Difficulty: Hard unless you already bring strong domain credibility from operations, customer success, engineering, finance, or healthcare.
Best target: Implementation, onboarding, business operations, PMO, scrum-adjacent, or chief-of-staff-style coordination roles that reward transferable judgment.
Biggest mistake: Leading with the title change you want instead of the business problems you already know how to solve.
Next step: Translate your past work into PM language: scope, stakeholders, dependencies, tradeoffs, metrics, and risk decisions.
Salary Reality
high pay highly concentrated
The clearest local signal is from posted compensation: local salary ranges center on about $100k to $142k, with a broader 25th-75th band of about $81k to $188k.[26] That is observed local posting data, not a full-wage census. For national benchmarks, project management specialists had a $100,750 median annual wage in May 2024, while product managers show higher estimated pay in salary-aggregator data, including $125,589 average base pay and $198,316 estimated total pay.[37][24]
Solid six-figure pay is realistic here for experienced candidates, but not all sub-roles participate equally. Product can pay above project, and domain-heavy roles can out-earn more generic coordination work.
The tradeoff is access: about 50% of postings skew senior, about 65% are on-site, and the local information sector is weaker than healthcare, finance, and professional services.[20][21][8][7][5][6]
Best-paying path: The strongest pay likely sits in product-facing roles and in domain-heavy work tied to fintech, enterprise software, data centers, engineering, or regulated operations, where business impact is easier to quantify.[24][3]
Caution: Do not overread top-end figures. Local posted ranges reflect a partial posting sample, and the highest national product-manager totals are estimated rather than direct local wage statistics.[26][24]
Where the Opportunities Are Concentrated
Real opportunity is spread across several employer types rather than one dominant hiring engine. Over the last 90 days, we observed more than 150 postings across more than 100 companies, and hiring in the sample was fragmented.[1][2] The most-active industries were construction (about 20%), information technology (about 20%), healthcare (about 15%), engineering (about 15%), and fintech (about 10%).[3] Named employers with repeated activity included Bill.com, LLC., The Church News, T5 Data Centers, Jacobs Technology Inc., NICE, Dashiell Corporation, Bbconcrete, and ARUP Laboratories, Inc.[4] The safer near-term demand looks less like consumer-tech product hiring and more like delivery, implementation, and operational leadership inside sectors that are still adding jobs locally. Professional and Business Services employment reached 147.7 thousand in January 2026 and was up 3.1% year over year, Education and Health Services reached 103.6 thousand and was up 3.7%, and Financial Activities reached 66.3 thousand and was up 2.8%.[5][6][7] By contrast, metro Information employment was 21.4 thousand and down -7.8% year over year, which helps explain why pure software-facing roles feel tighter.[8]
- Healthcare and laboratory operations (high): Healthcare is one of the stronger local backdrops: education and health services employment was 103.6 thousand and up 3.7% year over year, and ARUP Laboratories, Inc appears among the more consistently active employers in the sample.[6][4]
- Construction, engineering, and infrastructure (high): Construction and engineering together account for about 35% of observed category postings when you combine construction (about 20%) and engineering (about 15%), with recurring activity from T5 Data Centers, Jacobs Technology Inc., Dashiell Corporation, and Bbconcrete.[3][4]
- Fintech and regulated operations (moderate): Financial Activities employment was 66.3 thousand and up 2.8% year over year, and employers such as Bill.com, LLC. and NICE show continued demand for roles that mix delivery, stakeholder management, and process rigor.[7][4]
- Pure software product roles (limited): Information technology accounts for about 20% of observed postings, but metro Information employment was down -7.8% year over year and Oracle's March restructuring is a reminder that software-adjacent hiring remains the most volatile slice.[3][8][9]
Where to focus: Focus first on senior project/program and implementation roles in healthcare, construction/engineering, and fintech where local sector growth is firmer and domain knowledge matters more than brand-name product pedigree.[7][5][6][3]
Skills and Credentials Worth Pursuing
- Project management (table stakes): It is the most-requested skill in local postings at about 30%, so employers appear to treat it as baseline rather than a differentiator.[22]
- Data analysis (differentiator): Data analysis shows up in about 15% of local postings, and broader project-management guidance now treats data literacy as a must-have for tracking performance and forecasting outcomes.[22][30]
- Risk management (differentiator): Risk management appears in about 10% of local postings, and AI-enabled PM tools are increasingly used for risk analysis and decision support.[22][31][32]
- Stakeholder management and communication (premium): Stakeholder management, communication, and cross-functional collaboration all appear in the local mix, and national guidance increasingly treats these human skills as a strategic advantage as technical execution gets automated.[22][30]
- PMP (premium): PMP is the certification most often called out in local postings at about 10%, and national survey data cited by Coursera says PMP holders earn a median $30,000 more than non-certified peers.[33][25]
- Product management with outcomes ownership (premium): Product management appears in about 10% of local postings, and the role is shifting from shipping features to owning retention, revenue, and churn outcomes.[22][34]
- AI-assisted planning and PMO tooling (differentiator): Over 75% of PMOs are using or piloting AI tools, 76% of product leaders expect AI investment to rise in 2026, and AI is already being used for planning, resource management, reporting, risk analysis, and market intelligence.[32][35][31]
- Pragmatic Institute Certification (PMC) (differentiator): PMC is described as the most recognized product-management certification among hiring managers at enterprise companies.[36]
Adjacent Roles to Consider
- Program Manager (both): It keeps you in cross-functional leadership but usually values broader coordination and dependency management over pure product pedigree.
- Delivery Manager (bridge): This fits the local demand for implementation and execution-heavy work inside services, infrastructure, and regulated environments.
- Implementation Manager (bridge): It is a practical landing spot for candidates coming from customer success, operations, consulting, or internal transformation work.
- PMO Analyst / Project Coordinator (bridge): This is one of the cleaner entry paths if you lack formal PM title history but can show structured execution and reporting.
- Digital Product Manager (pivot): It is the clearest pivot for project or program managers who already work closely with digital teams and customer-facing roadmaps.
30 / 60 / 90-Day Plan
First 30 Days
- Split your resume into two versions: one for product/outcomes roles and one for delivery/program roles, each with 3-5 quantified results on revenue, retention, cycle time, launch timing, cost, or risk reduction.
- Build a target list by sector before company: healthcare/labs, construction/engineering/data centers, fintech, then software; do not start with a generic PM search.
- Assume on-site or hybrid first and map a realistic commute radius around Salt Lake City and Murray so you can answer location questions without hesitation.
- Choose one credibility move now: schedule your PMP exam plan, or build a short portfolio case on roadmap tradeoffs, KPI tracking, and stakeholder decisions.
Days 31-60
- Add one domain-specific artifact to every application packet: implementation plan, product brief, RAID log, portfolio dashboard, or post-launch readout.
- Create a 20-company outreach list from the employers and sectors showing repeated activity, and message directors, PMO leaders, ops leaders, and hiring managers with a sector-specific note rather than a generic intro.
- Practice interview stories around risk, prioritization, cross-functional conflict, and data-backed decisions; those are the themes most likely to separate finalists.
- Apply to adjacent titles on purpose—program manager, delivery manager, implementation manager, PMO analyst, and chief of staff—not just product manager.
Days 61-90
- If interviews are thin, pivot away from pure software PM searches and toward healthcare, finance, construction, engineering, and lab operations roles where local demand looks steadier.
- Complete the credential you started or finish an AI-enabled planning case study that shows how you use automation without losing judgment.
- Broaden your target compensation logic: ask for scope, bonus, title, or hybrid flexibility when base pay stalls.
- If you are still stalled, test contract, transformation, and implementation roles to re-enter faster, then use internal mobility to move back toward product or program leadership.
Methodology and Confidence
This March 2026 report was generated on April 21, 2026. Latest direct national data: March 2026. Latest direct Salt Lake City-Murray, UT data: April 2026.
Confidence: Overall confidence: Medium. Recent local labor-market context and local posting signals support the main conclusions, but some role-by-role differences inside this broad category still require inference.
Limitations
- The freshest direct metro labor-market readings here are from January 2026, while the occupation-share benchmark for management roles is from May 2024, so the exact balance between product, program, project, and chief-of-staff work may have shifted since then.[13][23]
- This category combines several sub-markets that do not move together; software-adjacent roles face a weaker backdrop because metro Information employment was down -7.8% year over year, while professional services, financial activities, and education/health were still growing.[8][5][7][6]
- The Callings.ai job database is a partial, deduplicated sample of online postings, so it is better for direction of demand, leading employer names, work-arrangement mix, and skill patterns than for treating exact counts or shares as full-market totals.[1][4][21][22]
- Recent WARN notices signal rising competition in the metro, but they do not tell us how many of the affected workers were in management, product, or project jobs specifically.[10]
- Several pay figures used here come from national salary guides or salary aggregators, which are helpful for framing upside but should not be read as exact local wage outcomes for Salt Lake City-Murray.[24][25][26]
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