Hiring Strategy July 10, 2026

Omnichannel Retail Compensation Benchmarks for 2026

What Site Ops, Category, Marketplace, and Omnichannel leadership roles actually pay this year, and the variables that move a number more than the job title does.

"What should we pay for this role?" comes up in almost every intake call, and it is usually followed by a compensation range pulled from a generic salary survey that blends every retail and eCommerce title into one number. That approach undersells how much omnichannel complexity actually moves compensation. A Site Operations Manager running a single Shopify storefront and a Site Operations Manager coordinating inventory accuracy across stores, a marketplace, and a DTC site are not the same hire, even when the job title on LinkedIn looks identical, and the pay should not be either.

The ranges below reflect what we are actually seeing move through active searches across our 12 practice areas in 2026, not a blended national average. They are directional benchmarks meant to help hiring managers set a realistic band before a search kicks off, not a guarantee for any specific market, company stage, or candidate.

2026 Base Salary Ranges by Role and Level

These ranges assume a mid-size to large retail or omnichannel organization in a standard cost-of-living market. Smaller companies and lower cost-of-living regions typically land toward the low end, while candidates with retailer-specific or platform-specific experience often land above the high end.

RoleManager LevelDirector LevelVP / Head Level
Site Operations$95K–$135K$130K–$170K$175K–$240K
Category Management$90K–$130K$135K–$175K$180K–$250K
Marketplace Management$100K–$140K$140K–$180K$185K–$255K
Supply Chain & Operations$95K–$135K$140K–$180K$190K–$260K
DTC Site Management & Marketing$85K–$120K$125K–$160K$165K–$225K
Full Omnichannel P&L OwnerN/A$155K–$200K$190K–$280K

That last row deserves its own callout. A candidate who owns performance across stores, digital, and marketplace at once is not simply a Director or VP with a broader task list. That combined skill set remains genuinely scarce, and companies that try to price it the same as a single-channel leadership role are usually the ones stuck in a search for several extra weeks.

What Actually Moves the Number More Than Title Does

Retailer-Specific and Platform-Specific Experience

A Category Manager who has actually managed a Target or Kroger relationship, or a Marketplace Manager fluent in a specific retail media console, commands a premium over a candidate with generalist experience at the same title and years of tenure. This is consistently the single biggest lever we see move an offer above the midpoint of a range.

Channel Complexity

Owning one channel well is a different job than owning the coordination between three. Compensation benchmarks that do not account for whether a role sits over a single channel or the full omnichannel mix will consistently underprice the harder version of the job and struggle to attract candidates for it.

Company Stage and Ownership Structure

Private equity-backed and venture-backed companies more often supplement base salary with meaningful equity or a bonus structure tied to specific operating metrics, while established retailers tend to weight compensation more heavily toward base and a standard annual bonus. Candidates comparing two offers at similar base salaries are often really comparing very different total compensation structures.

Regional Cost of Labor

Remote-friendly roles have compressed some of the historical gap between major metro and secondary markets, but it has not disappeared, particularly for roles that still require occasional travel to a distribution center, retailer headquarters, or store footprint.

How to Use These Ranges Without Under- or Over-Paying

Questions

FAQ

What is the typical salary range for a Site Operations Manager in 2026?

Most Site Operations Manager roles land between roughly $95,000 and $135,000 in base salary in 2026, with the higher end typically going to candidates who have run a platform migration or manage a catalog above 50,000 SKUs. Bonus is usually modest at this level, often in the 5 to 10 percent range, since the role is closer to operational execution than P&L ownership.

How much does a VP of Omnichannel or VP of Retail typically earn?

VP of Omnichannel or VP of Retail roles typically run between $190,000 and $280,000 in base salary in 2026, with total compensation often reaching $260,000 to $400,000 or more once bonus and, at private equity-backed or venture-backed companies, equity are included. The range widens significantly based on whether the VP owns a single channel or the full omnichannel P&L across stores, digital, and marketplace.

What is driving compensation changes in omnichannel retail hiring this year?

Two forces are pushing comp up for specific profiles while leaving others flat. Candidates who can operate across store, digital, and marketplace channels at once are commanding a premium because that combined skill set is still rare, while single-channel digital specialists are seeing more modest growth as the pure eCommerce hiring market has cooled compared to two years ago. Retailer-specific and platform-specific experience continues to carry a consistent premium across nearly every practice area.

Should compensation vary between digital-only and omnichannel roles?

Generally yes. A role that owns performance across stores, digital, and marketplace channels carries more P&L complexity and cross-functional coordination than a single-channel digital role at the same title, and compensation benchmarks should reflect that rather than defaulting to a flat number by job title alone. Companies that pay omnichannel and digital-only roles identically often struggle to attract candidates for the broader role.

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