Is Operations, Supply Chain & Logistics a Good Job Market in San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad, CA?

Produced by Callings.ai on May 10, 2026

Executive Verdict

Market rating: balanced | Confidence: Medium

This is a workable market, but not a soft one. San Diego had more than 1,200 observed postings across more than 650 companies over the last 90 days, and the employer base was fragmented rather than dominated by one firm.[18][19] Pay is solid—BLS shows a $115,350 metro median for general and operations managers, while current posted ranges across the broader category center on about $91k to $130k—but most roles are on-site and recent local layoffs at Qualcomm and Epic are a reminder that candidate leverage is uneven.[1][2][6][24][23]

Best positioned: The best odds right now go to candidates who can show hands-on inventory, safety/compliance, customer-facing operations, and analytics or ERP depth, and who are willing to work on-site for larger employers.[11][5][6][15]

Main caution: The biggest trap is assuming the visible volume of openings means easy access: about 90% of sampled roles are on-site, less than 5% mention visa sponsorship, and many routine entry-level tasks are getting automated.[6][22][9][10]

What Changed Recently

What This Means for You

Entry-Level Candidates

Difficulty: Competitive. About half of sampled openings skew entry-level, but the easier-to-describe clerical tasks inside supply chain are also the tasks most exposed to automation.[7][9][10]

Best target: Target on-site inventory, warehouse coordination, dispatch, fulfillment, and operations-support roles where employers explicitly ask for communication, inventory management, customer service, problem solving, and safety compliance.[11][6]

Biggest mistake: Applying to planner or analyst roles with a generic warehouse résumé and no proof of metrics, systems use, or error reduction.

Next step: Build a one-page proof sheet with cycle counts, order accuracy, receiving volume, pick-rate, shrink, safety record, and any WMS, TMS, or ERP exposure; then apply within the first week a posting appears because the typical active listing is open around 24 days.[12]

Mid-Career Candidates

Difficulty: Balanced to competitive. The market has room, but the best openings cluster in larger employers and reward people who can run processes, vendors, budgets, and cross-functional handoffs.[5][13]

Best target: Aim at enterprise roles in food & beverage, retail, logistics, manufacturing, and healthcare, especially operations manager, buyer/planner, procurement, and distribution roles that blend execution with analytics.[14][5]

Biggest mistake: Leading with broad operations language instead of hard business outcomes such as fill rate, OTIF, inventory turns, labor productivity, forecast accuracy, or cost takeout.

Next step: Create two tailored résumés: one for people/process leadership and one for planning/procurement/analytics, and add a visible tools section covering ERP, TMS, WMS, SAP IBP, or forecasting tools where relevant.[15][13]

Career Switchers

Difficulty: Moderate to high. The easiest entry is through operationally intensive sectors already hiring locally rather than through strategy-heavy titles.[14]

Best target: Switch into retail, food & beverage, logistics, or healthcare operations-support roles where customer service, time management, and inventory discipline transfer cleanly.[14][11]

Biggest mistake: Trying to jump straight into strategic supply chain titles without proving hands-on process control, compliance, or systems fluency.

Next step: Use a bridge story: show how your prior work improved throughput, scheduling, stock accuracy, vendor response, or service levels, then back it up with one technical credential in analytics or supply chain technology.[16][17]

Salary Reality

good pay high barrier

The cleanest local wage anchor is BLS data for General and Operations Managers in San Diego, which showed a median of $115,350, a 25th percentile of $76,410, and a 75th percentile of $178,240 as of May 2024.[1] That is direct local government data, but it covers one management occupation, not every buyer, planner, warehouse, logistics, or procurement job in this broader category. Current local posted-pay signals across the broader category center on about $91k to $130k, with a wider 25th-75th posted band of about $70k to $167k.[2] As a statewide cross-check, Revelio Public Labor Statistics put the mean offered salary on new California openings in this occupation family at about $101,229 in April 2026, above the statewide all-occupation offered mean of about $89,408.[3]

This is better-than-average pay for California operations work, but it does not stretch as far in San Diego as it would in cheaper metros because the local cost-of-living index was 160.1, about 60% above the national average.[4]

The upside is offset by enterprise-style competition, an overwhelmingly on-site market, and a local hiring mix that includes plenty of lower-paid frontline roles alongside better-paid managers and planners.[5][6][7]

Best-paying path: The strongest pay tends to sit in experienced operations management and specialized planning leadership. Locally, the BLS 75th percentile for general and operations managers reaches $178,240, and nationally the median base salary for VP of Supply Chain is $205,000, but that senior figure belongs to a narrow executive tier rather than the everyday market.[1][8]

Caution: Do not overread the top end. The local government wage anchor is for a single occupation, and posted salary bands mix many sub-roles with different seniority, so the headline high numbers are not a realistic expectation for most applicants.[1][2]

Where the Opportunities Are Concentrated

Real opportunity is spread across a long tail, not locked inside one or two flagship employers. Over the last 90 days, we observed more than 1,200 postings across more than 650 companies in San Diego, and the employer base was fragmented in the sample.[18][19] That means you should build a broad target list instead of waiting on a single tech or defense brand. Named local hirers include Qualcomm, Dexcom, and General Atomics, while the posting sample also shows steady activity from Domino's Pizza.[20][21] The mix is more operationally diverse than many candidates assume. Food & beverage and retail each account for about 20% of postings, followed by logistics at about 15%, manufacturing at about 10%, and healthcare at about 10%.[14] About 55% of sampled roles come from enterprise employers, and the category is about 90% on-site, so employers are rewarding process discipline, service reliability, and physical-site coordination more than remote strategy-only profiles.[5][6] Entry and mid-level roles make up most of the visible market—about 50% entry and about 35% mid—so there is access below senior management, but not necessarily into remote or sponsorship-friendly setups.[7][22]

Where to focus: Focus first on on-site enterprise employers in retail, food & beverage, logistics, manufacturing, and healthcare, and pitch yourself as a person who can improve inventory accuracy, service levels, and compliance from day one.

Skills and Credentials Worth Pursuing

Adjacent Roles to Consider

30 / 60 / 90-Day Plan

First 30 Days

Days 31-60

Days 61-90

Methodology and Confidence

This April 2026 report was generated on May 10, 2026. Latest direct national data: April 2026. Latest direct San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad, CA data: May 2026.

Confidence: Overall confidence: Medium. Direct local occupation data exists, but recent local hiring and skill patterns rely partly on broader and directional signals.

Limitations

References

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