Skip to content
  • Texas | Arizona | Virginia | Idaho | Illinois
  • (888) 705-0930
  • info@therawragency.com
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Linkedin-in
rawr logo short
  • Home
  • About
  • Solutions
    colorized icons 04
    B2B Marketing
    colorized icons 05
    B2C Marketing
    colorized icons 06
    Online Visibility Management
  • Industries
    colorized icons 07
    Healthcare
    colorized icons 08
    Manufacturing
    colorized icons 10
    Home Services
    colorized icons 09
    Professional Services (B2B)
    colorized icons 11
    Retail
  • Services
    colorized icons 01
    Brand Strategy
    • Graphic Design
    • Corporate Brand Identity
    • Sales Enablement
    • Editorial Calendar Management
    colorized icons 02
    Website Design
    • WordPress Website Development
    • Conversion Rate Optimization
    • eCommerce Development
    • Content Strategy & Copywriting
    colorized icons 03
    Digital Marketing
    • Digital Marketing Strategy
    • Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
    • Pay-Per-Click (PPC) Management
    • Content Marketing & Digital PR
    • Account Based Marketing (B2B)
    • Marketing Automation
    • Social Media Management
  • Blog
  • Contact
Let's Talk

More than 70% of SEOs in the U.S. are men, make more than female colleagues

geography and gender in SEO 1 1
  • August 24, 2020
  • General
  • Agency
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

There is still considerable gender inequality in SEO. In 2015, female SEOs represented about 30% of the industry, according to a survey from Moz. That percentage hasn’t budged in five years, according to a new global survey of 652 SEOs from Nicole DeLeon’s North Star Inbound.

Men represented 68.4% of survey respondents, while women were 29.3%. A small percentage declined to state or identified as non-binary.

U.S. slightly worse than average. Broken down by geography, the U.S. numbers were somewhat more skewed than the overall sample. Male SEOs comprised 70% of respondents. However there were even greater male-to-female ratios in Asia, the U.K., Australia and Central and South America.

One thing to keep in mind: the sample of 652 respondents means that when it’s segmented by geography, the numbers may become too small to be representative. But, the data is consistent with other, previous surveys.

Geography and SEO gender diversity

Source: North Star Inbound.

The pay gap remains. A recent BrightLocal survey about people working in local SEO specifically found a pay gap of roughly 14% between men and women. Men were also more likely to occupy senior roles in agencies.

The North Star Inbound survey found that across the board women were making and charging less than their male counterparts, whether in agencies or as freelancers. For SEOs who use retainers, “those identifying as male charge a median retainer of $2,250 a month while those identifying as female charge a median of $1,750.”

Among those billing on a project basis, men were charging nearly 67% more. Male freelancers reported “a median of $5,000 vs. $3,000 for female-identifying SEOs.” The disparity was even greater for agencies charging by project: $8,750 per project for men, $2,250 for women.

In-house, technical SEO and freelancers. Findings from in-house SEOs in the North Star Inbound survey were somewhat encouraging. Women and men equally “reported strong levels of interdepartmental cooperation and support for SEO priorities.” And, women appear to be slightly more satisfied than men with in-house support, staffing, budget and tools.

But in technical SEO, there’s a significant gap between men and women. Roughly 22% male respondents identified themselves as technical SEO experts compared to just under 13% of women.

Finally, women were more likely than men to be SEO freelancers: 17.7% for women vs. 10.6% of men. The survey hypothesizes this is due to the greater need for flexible scheduling among women. “Part of the appeal may be flexibility around childcare, but control over income was also a factor for some of the SEOs we interviewed,” North Star Inbound explained.

Why we care. Organizations that feature greater diversity in their leadership teams are more likely to be innovative with corresponding revenue growth. Indeed, diversity is good for the bottom line. But, overcoming institutional bias and gender discrimination is an ingrained and even structural problem that will take concerted effort over a period of years to overcome.

While there are some areas to be optimistic about in the survey data — and despite some very successful, high profile female SEOs in the industry — there has been only limited progress in the past five years. Clearly, we need to do much more in the way of training, mentoring and cultural change.

RELATED: 13 stories of women who are shaping the SEO field

The post More than 70% of SEOs in the U.S. are men, make more than female colleagues appeared first on Search Engine Land.


Source: IAB

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Recent Blog Posts

9 Hidden Revenue Blockers Every CRO Needs to Eliminate

February 3, 2025

What Is B2B Appointment Setting?

November 29, 2024

Leveraging LinkedIn for Targeted Growth

November 12, 2024

Mastering B2B Prospecting: Key Strategies for Sales Success

November 4, 2024

Maximize Marketing ROI: How Cost per Lead Can Fuel Your Business Growth

June 13, 2024
View More
rawr logo short
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Linkedin-in
Get In Touch
  • Texas | Arizona | Virginia | Idaho | Illinois
  • (888) 705-0930
  • info@therawragency.com
Send An Email

"*" indicates required fields

Copyright 2025 | The RAWR Agency, LLC. |

Sitemap | Privacy Policy

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OkNo