Compare Occupations

SUMMARY
61%
High Risk
28%
Low Risk
24%
Low Risk
25%
Low Risk
38%
Low Risk
32%
Low Risk
JOB SCORE 3.8/10 7.0/10 6.8/10 5.5/10 6.1/10 4.3/10
POLLING
36%
(Low Risk, Based on 54 votes)
26%
(Low Risk, Based on 519 votes)
There hasn't been enough votes on this occupation yet
38%
(Low Risk, Based on 67 votes)
33%
(Low Risk, Based on 103 votes)
50%
(Moderate Risk, Based on 126 votes)
GROWTH
by year 2034
-9.6%
4.5%
5.3%
-0.8%
3.8%
-4.2%
WAGES
$49,850
or $23.96 per hour
$59,310
or $28.51 per hour
$78,690
or $37.83 per hour
$72,120
or $34.67 per hour
$48,620
or $23.37 per hour
$77,070
or $37.05 per hour
VOLUME
as of 2024
14,980
697,740
806,080
137,210
1,531,700
219,530
SNOWFLAKE [?] The Snowflake is a visual summary of the five badges: Automation Risk (calculated), Risk (polled), Growth, Wages and Volume. It gives you an instant snapshot of an occupations profile. The colour of the Snowflake relates to its size. The better the occupation scores in relation to others, the larger and greener the Snowflake becomes. Snowflake diagram for Carpet Installers Snowflake diagram for Carpenters Snowflake diagram for First-Line Supervisors of Construction Trades and Extraction Workers Snowflake diagram for Construction and Building Inspectors Snowflake diagram for Maintenance and Repair Workers, General Snowflake diagram for Cost Estimators
DESCRIPTION Lay and install carpet from rolls or blocks on floors. Install padding and trim flooring materials. Construct, erect, install, or repair structures and fixtures made of wood and comparable materials, such as concrete forms; building frameworks, including partitions, joists, studding, and rafters; and wood stairways, window and door frames, and hardwood floors. May also install cabinets, siding, drywall, and batt or roll insulation. Includes brattice builders who build doors or brattices (ventilation walls or partitions) in underground passageways. Directly supervise and coordinate activities of construction or extraction workers. Inspect structures using engineering skills to determine structural soundness and compliance with specifications, building codes, and other regulations. Inspections may be general in nature or may be limited to a specific area, such as electrical systems or plumbing. Perform work involving the skills of two or more maintenance or craft occupations to keep machines, mechanical equipment, or the structure of a building in repair. Duties may involve pipe fitting; HVAC maintenance; insulating; welding; machining; carpentry; repairing electrical or mechanical equipment; installing, aligning, and balancing new equipment; and repairing buildings, floors, or stairs. Prepare cost estimates for product manufacturing, construction projects, or services to aid management in bidding on or determining price of product or service. May specialize according to particular service performed or type of product manufactured.

Compare Occupations Side by Side

Curious how automation and AI could affect your career? Our comparison tool lets you view two or more jobs side by side, helping you quickly spot differences in risk level, pay, growth, and popularity. All of this is based on a mix of academic research, user polling, and official labour data.

Automation Risk

Each occupation shows a probability of automation. A higher score means machines and algorithms are more likely to take over the role in the future.

Job Score

A quick summary of how a job performs overall — factoring in wages, growth, volume, and automation risk. It’s a handy way to see the bigger picture at a glance.

Polling Data

Thousands of visitors cast their votes on how “automatable” each job feels. These community insights are shown alongside the calculated probabilities.

Growth & Wages

See how fast each occupation is projected to grow and what people earn on average. High wages don’t always mean high security — automation risk still matters.

Volume of Workers

Explore how many people currently work in each occupation and in which year the data was recorded. Popularity can affect how disruptive automation will be for the wider economy.

The Snowflake Diagram

Each snowflake visualises the balance between automation risk, wages, growth, and job volume. Bigger and greener areas mean stronger performance in that dimension.

Use this comparison page to research careers, guide students, or simply explore the future of work. All data is regularly updated to keep the results relevant.