The Wages of Work: MPI Releases 2005 Salary Survey
If you're in meeting planning for the money, it helps to be a guy … with lots of experience … working for a corporation. You probably could have guessed that without reading the results of Meeting Professionals International's new salary survey, but the in-depth report, based on responses gathered from 1,139 MPI members last spring, is a fascinating look at compensation in our profession.
Gender pay differences stood out most dramatically. The average base salary in the United States for the 933 women and 97 men reporting was more than $16,000 apart: $73,833 for men and $57,394 for women.
MPI researchers also charted men's and women's salaries based on their years of experience and found that the disparity gets worse as the years go on. For example, U.S. planners with three to five years' experience show salary differences of just 6 percent ($49,493 versus $52,680, in the men's favor), but the gap widens to 14 percent for those with six to nine years' experience ($52,927 versus $60,154), and jumps to 36 percent for planners reporting 15 to 20 years in the field ($64,162 versus $87,445).
The male respondents in the MPI survey have education in their favor, which may be a contributing factor. They report having more formal education and taking more hours of continuing education each year, and are more likely to hold an industry certification. They were more likely to have a high-level position within their organization.
MPI's comparison of association and corporate salaries also made for revealing reading. Association planners in the United States on average earn 16 percent less than corporate planners, with the gap starting at about 10 percent at the planner level and widening to 36 percent at the director level.
Independent planners were not well-represented in the survey; only 55 completed the salary information, of which 45 percent said that they were their company's only employee. Overall, the average salary for independents was $66,309, with those with a president/CEO title earning an average of $78,966.
For the most part, salaries among MPI members are not stagnant. Three out of four respondents got a raise in the six months preceding the survey. Of the planners reporting the amount of their increase, 43 percent earned a raise in the 3 percent to 4 percent range, while 26 percent improved their salary by 5 percent to 9 percent.
A complete salary survey is available to purchase from MPI — visit www.mpiweb.org.
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© 2009 Penton Media Inc.
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