This circular packing chart visualizes the distribution of professionals across various industries, with the size of each circle representing the count of individuals in that sector.
Average Salary by Role
This chart displays the average reported salary across various occupational roles, highlighting the financial landscape for different positions within the industry.
Data Scientists earn the highest average salary, reflecting the strong demand and specialized skills required in this role.
Data Engineers and Data Architects also command high salaries, indicating their critical roles in building and maintaining data infrastructure.
Roles categorized as “Other” and Data Analysts offer moderate compensation, showing value while reflecting a broader range of responsibilities.
Database Developers and Students are at the lower end of the salary spectrum, likely due to either niche focus or early career status.
Gender Distribution
This donut chart illustrates the percentage distribution of different genders within the surveyed population, providing insight into workforce diversity.
Male professionals make up 50% of the surveyed population.
Female professionals account for 49%, indicating near gender parity.
Non-binary individuals represent 1%, showing growing recognition and inclusion of gender diversity.
Happiness with Job Aspects
The radar chart evaluates satisfaction levels across key job aspects such as salary, work-life balance, and learning opportunities, on a scale of 1 to 7.
Learning opportunities and work-life balance are the top-rated aspects, indicating that professionals highly value growth and personal time.
Salary also scores well, suggesting general satisfaction with compensation across roles.
Coworker relationships receive solid ratings, reflecting positive team dynamics.
Mobility and management are the least satisfying aspects, possibly pointing to limitations in career progression or leadership quality.
Favorite Programming Languages
This bar chart shows the popularity of various programming languages among professionals, indicating current trends and preferred tools in the field.
Python is the most favored programming language, indicating its dominance in modern development, data science, and automation.
JavaScript holds strong popularity, reflecting its essential role in web development and full-stack applications.
Java and SQL are still widely used, particularly in enterprise environments and data-driven systems.
C# has moderate usage, likely tied to Windows-based development and game development (via Unity).
R is the least used among the listed languages, suggesting niche adoption mainly in statistical computing and research contexts.
Country Distribution (Draggable Globe)
Explore the global distribution of respondents using this interactive 3D globe. Countries are colored based on the number of participants from that region.
Years of Experience Distribution
This area chart visualizes the distribution of professionals based on their years of experience, showing the prevalence of different career stages.
The majority of professionals fall within the 3–5 years experience range, indicating a strong presence of early-mid career individuals.
There is a steady increase in professionals from 0–1 to 3–5 years, suggesting active early-career hiring.
A noticeable decline occurs after 5 years of experience, pointing to potential attrition or fewer mid-senior level roles.
Senior professionals (10+ years) form a smaller segment of the workforce, possibly due to transitions into leadership roles or industry exits.