Sports Illustrated VP of Care Salary | Comparably
Sports Illustrated provides breaking news, conversation and original reporting/insights on all sports. read more
EMPLOYEE
PARTICIPANTS
8
TOTAL
RATINGS
134

Sports Illustrated VP of Care Salary

The average Sports Illustrated VP of Care earns an estimated $196,764 annually, which includes an estimated base salary of $173,276 with a $23,488 bonus. Sports Illustrated's VP of Care compensation is $43,344 more than the US average for a VP of Care. VP of Care salaries at Sports Illustrated can range from $79,000 - $300,000.

The Customer Support Department at Sports Illustrated earns $8,635 more on average than the Sales Department.

Last updated 3 years ago.

$30k
$79k
$115k
$158k
$210k
$270k
$320k
$196,764
Average Compensation
$173,276
avg. base
$23,488
avg. bonus

VP of Care Salaries at Sports Illustrated

VPs of Care earn $112,810 more than Technical Supports.

Technical Support
$84k*
Customer Service Manager
$75k*
CS Rep
$64k*
* estimated salary

Compensation at Sports Illustrated by Department

The Customer Support Department averages $8,635 more than the Sales Department, and $340 less than the Engineering Department

Engineering
$123,772 Avg. total comp.
+$340
Customer Support
$123,432 Avg. total comp.
Sales
$114,797 Avg. total comp.
-$9k

VP of Care Compensation by Gender (All Companies)

The average female VP of Care at companies similar size to Sports Illustrated reported making $179,500, while the average male VP of Care at similar sized companies reported making $217,320.

VP of Care Compensation by Ethnicity (All Companies)

The average Asian or Pacific Islander VP of Care at companies similar size to Sports Illustrated reported making $250,000, while the average Caucasian VP of Care at similar sized companies reported making $194,000.

How VPs of Care at Sports Illustrated Rate Their Compensation

The majority of VPs of Care at Sports Illustrated believe they're not compensated fairly. 100% of VPs of Care at Sports Illustrated say they receive annual bonuses, and the majority (50%) are satisfied with their benefits. See more compensation ratings at Sports Illustrated

×
Rate your company