Is Operations, Supply Chain & Logistics a Good Job Market in Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH?

Produced by Callings.ai on April 21, 2026

Executive Verdict

Market rating: competitive | Confidence: Medium

Boston is not frozen for this category: the local sample showed more than 650 postings across more than 300 companies in the last 90 days, and the trend was up.[26] But it is still a competitive market because metro unemployment was 4.8% in January 2026, up 14.3% year over year, while the metro employment level was down 2.1% year over year.[2][24] The clearest demand is concentrated in healthcare-heavy employers, which account for about 70% of sampled postings, and most roles are on-site rather than remote.[11][14]

Best positioned: Mid-career candidates who can work on-site and show healthcare, scheduling, database, ERP, procurement, or process-improvement depth have the best odds, because about 55% of sampled roles are mid-level and about 70% of postings sit in healthcare-heavy employers.[9][11]

Main caution: Do not treat Boston as a broad remote-friendly operations market: only about 5% of sampled roles are remote, only about 20% are entry-level, and less than 5% are lead+.[14][9]

What Changed Recently

What This Means for You

Entry-Level Candidates

Difficulty: Moderately hard: only about 20% of sampled roles are entry-level, and about 75% of postings that list education ask for a bachelor's degree.[9][10]

Best target: Target coordinator, scheduler, operations analyst, and inventory-support roles inside healthcare and healthcare-services employers, which make up about 70% of the local demand sample.[11]

Biggest mistake: Applying only to remote roles or generic manager titles without a concrete process niche.

Next step: Build a one-page proof pack that shows scheduling, database management, Microsoft Office, record keeping, and any measurable workflow improvement, because those are among the most common local skill asks.[12]

Mid-Career Candidates

Difficulty: Best odds in this market: about 55% of sampled postings are mid-level, and posted salary ranges center on about $88k to $120k.[9][13]

Best target: Aim at healthcare operations, procurement, planning, or business operations roles where on-site execution and cross-functional coordination matter more than pure strategy.[11][14]

Biggest mistake: Presenting yourself as a broad manager instead of showing ownership of scheduling, vendor, inventory, service-level, or system outcomes.

Next step: Create two resume versions—one for operations/process leadership and one for procurement/planning—and add ERP, dashboard, and Lean language if you can support it with real results.[15][16][17]

Career Switchers

Difficulty: Competitive but possible: the market is mostly on-site, bachelor's-heavy, and skewed to employers that want proof you can run repeatable workflows.[14][10]

Best target: Switch into analyst, coordinator, procurement support, or planning roles first, then move up once you have domain-specific process wins.

Biggest mistake: Trying to leap directly into director-level titles in a market where less than 5% of sampled roles are lead+.[9]

Next step: Pick one lane—procurement, planning/inventory, or operations analysis—and back it with one credential plus a small portfolio of dashboards, SOPs, or process maps.[18][19][20][17]

Salary Reality

high pay highly concentrated

Observed local postings center on about $88k to $120k a year, with a broader band of about $71k to $156k; hourly-paid postings center on about $21 to $25 an hour.[13][21] Proxy pay sources put logisticians at a national median of $80,880, logistics and supply chain managers at $95,375, procurement officers at $95,815, and operations analysts at $66,899.[22][23]

Boston can pay well, but the usable middle of the market sits below headline executive supply-chain numbers and is tied to mid-career, on-site roles rather than remote corporate strategy jobs.[13][14][9]

The pay upside is offset by a softer metro labor market—unemployment was 4.8% in January 2026 and the employment level was down 2.1% year over year—and by heavy concentration in healthcare, where employers often want sector fit.[2][24][11]

Best-paying path: The strongest pay tends to sit in procurement management and director-level supply chain or operations roles; national guidance places procurement managers around $95,000–$145,000, supply chain directors around $130,000–$190,000, and operations managers around $120,000–$150,000.[25][16]

Caution: Do not overread top-end figures such as chief supply chain or VP logistics pay, because those ranges are national, leadership-heavy, and concentrated in a small set of industries rather than representative of most Boston openings.[25]

Where the Opportunities Are Concentrated

The clearest opportunity cluster is healthcare. In the local job sample, healthcare accounts for about 70% of Operations, Supply Chain & Logistics postings, and Boston education and health services employment was 616.5 thousand in January 2026, up 0.2% year over year.[11][29] The local skill mix even includes Rethink software at about 40%, which points to a large care-delivery and scheduling component inside the sample rather than a pure warehouse or transportation market.[12] Beyond healthcare, the market looks thinner and more selective. Professional and Business Services employment in the metro was 486.1 thousand in January 2026 and down 2.5% year over year, while Financial Activities employment was 175.3 thousand and down 0.2% year over year.[30][31] Those sectors still create business-operations jobs, but the evidence suggests less broad-based expansion than in healthcare, so candidates need sharper domain alignment. The employer base is not dominated by one giant buyer. The local sample shows more than 650 postings across more than 300 companies, with fragmented employer concentration.[26][27] That is good for persistence—there are many entry points—but it also means hiring standards vary a lot by employer type and sub-role.

Where to focus: Focus first on on-site healthcare and healthcare-services employers where you can show process reliability, documentation discipline, scheduling control, and coordination across teams.

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 March 2026 report was generated on April 22, 2026. Latest direct national data: April 2026. Latest direct Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH data: November 2026.

Confidence: Overall confidence: Medium. The local direction is readable, but official occupation-specific data lags the report month and some conclusions rely on category-level inference.

Limitations

References

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  2. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Bureau of Labor Statistics Data · 2026-01 · data.bls.gov
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  4. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Federal Funds Effective Rate · 2026-03 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  5. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Job Openings: Total Nonfarm · 2026-02 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  6. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Hires: Total Nonfarm · 2026-02 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  7. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Average Hourly Earnings of All Employees, Total Private · 2026-03 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  8. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average · 2026-03 · fred.stlouisfed.org
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  16. Scoperecruiting. Supply Chain Salaries by Experience Level 2026 | SCOPE Salary Guide · 2026-01 · scoperecruiting.com
  17. Scoperecruiting. Supply Chain Skills for AI: What Actually Matters in 2026 · 2026-02 · scoperecruiting.com
  18. Info. Top 10 Supply Chain & Logistics Certifications in 2026 · 2026-01 · info.c3solutions.com
  19. Coprep. Which Supply Chain Certification is Actually Worth It in 2026? · 2026-01 · coprep.ai
  20. Blog. 5 Best Supply Chain Certifications for 2026 (For Every Career Stage) - The Interview Guys · 2026-03 · blog.theinterviewguys.com
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  22. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Logisticians · 2026-03 · bls.gov
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  33. Mass. Mass - warn_notice_layoff · 2026-03 · mass.gov
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