Technical PM in IT — CIS and Europe market
Technical PM — management role in IT requiring a strong technical background. The name hides two related but different roles, and it's important to distinguish them. Technical Program Manager (TPM) — coordinates complex cross-team technical programmes and initiatives: large technical projects involving many teams (migrations, platform launches, infrastructure initiatives); TPM deeply understands the tech, manages dependencies between teams, risks, technical trade-offs — the role is especially developed at large tech companies. Technical Product Manager — product manager for technical products: APIs, platforms, infrastructure, dev tools, ML platforms, B2D (developer-facing) products; this is a full Product Manager (see /research/pm/product-manager), but their users are developers and engineers, and the product itself is technical, so real technical depth is needed. Common to both roles — technical expertise as a mandatory condition: most Technical PMs come from engineering. Role family: Technical Program Manager (TPM), Technical Product Manager, Platform Product Manager (product manager of a platform), Senior / Principal TPM. Area of responsibility (depending on the role variant): coordination of cross-team technical programmes, management of technical dependencies and risks, participation in technical and architectural decisions and trade-offs, for the product variant — strategy and roadmap of a technical product, work with developers as users, API design and developer experience. Stack / tools 2026: Jira + Confluence, SQL, understanding of API, system design, architecture (microservices, cloud, infrastructure), CI/CD and development processes, analytics and metrics, for the product variant — product frameworks and discovery. According to Zorky CRM, 167 active openings with a median salary of $6250/mo. Top stack: visio, databricks, mongodb, ms project, jira. 28.7% remote. Technical PM — one of the highest-paying management roles in IT: combination of management skills with real technical depth is a scarce combination, especially valuable at large tech companies and on technical products.
Comparison with other specializations
The Product Management direction contains 5 specializations. The current one (Technical PM) is highlighted in blue — compare it with its neighbors by the number of open jobs and median salary.
Demand trend
Technical PM — well-paid and scarce role: the combination of management skills with real technical depth is rare. Drivers 2026: growing complexity of technical systems, platform approach, lots of cross-team technical programmes at large companies. TPM — mass and prestigious role in global big tech.
How many new jobs appear each week.
Seniority distribution — trend
How the share of Junior/Middle/Senior/Lead in open jobs shifts week over week. A trend toward Senior usually signals a mature specialization where companies look for ready-made talent; the opposite — a rise in Junior — signals expansion and ground-up team building.
Share of each level in % of all jobs with a stated grade per week.
Salary by level
Pure Junior openings are almost non-existent — not an entry role. Career flow: developer / team lead / architect → Technical PM / TPM → Senior → Principal TPM / Head of Technical Program Management, or into product or engineering leadership.
Median salary (USD/month) at each grade plus the jump vs the previous one.
Biggest salary jump — between Junior and Middle (+62.5%).
Salary distribution — trend
The median Technical PM salary — $6250/mo — higher than regular Product Manager and Project Manager of the same grade (real technical expertise requirement). Real bands: Middle $3,000-5,000, Senior $5,000-8,000, Lead / Principal $7,500-12,000; at large tech companies and on international full-remote — higher ($7,000-14,000+ Senior).
What share of jobs each price band holds week over week.
56% of jobs are in the $5–8K range (the core market). High-end $8K+ segment: 13% — usually US-remote or senior-international roles.
Hiring geography
The leader by Technical PM job count is EN (64 positions). Demand concentrates in large tech and product companies (where the TPM role is most developed), fintech, telecom, cloud providers, and companies with platform products. International companies actively hire Russian-speaking Senior Technical PM / TPM on full-remote.
Job distribution by country.
These numbers reflect the distribution across the sources we parse. Poland often looks dominant because of dense NoFluffJobs / JustJoin.it / Pracuj coverage — the Polish IT market is genuinely large, but in our sample its share is overweighted relative to the real volume of all IT jobs in the region. Same caveat for other top countries: this is «where our parsers look», not «the true size of the market».
Remote / Hybrid / Office — trend
28.7% of Technical PM jobs are remote or hybrid. The work is done well at a distance; in large organisations hybrid is sometimes more convenient for coordinating many teams. International companies — on full-remote ($7,000-14,000/mo Senior, English mandatory). Specialist scarcity with the "tech + management" combination makes the role profitable for remote work.
How the share of each work format shifts week over week.
80% — remote. Specialisation is well-adapted to remote format.
Top in-demand technologies
Top Technical PM skills and tools 2026: technical base (system design, architecture — microservices / cloud / infrastructure, API, CI/CD, development processes), SQL, Jira + Confluence, programme planning tools, Miro, metrics; skills — cross-team dependency management (TPM's main), technical risk management, technical judgement, complex programme planning, communication, stakeholder management, influence without power; for the product variant — discovery, metrics, roadmap, developer experience.
Technology combinations
Common pairs: system design + programme management, API + developer experience (for Technical Product Manager), cross-team dependencies + risk management, Jira + programme metrics, technical judgement + stakeholder management. Learning roadmap: real engineering experience (development / team lead / architecture) → management tasks in engineering position (coordination, initiatives) → programme and dependency management → choose variant (TPM or Technical Product Manager) → product skills for product variant → transition into role (usually inside the company) → English for international market.
Which pairs of technologies appear together most often in a single job.
Where we see these jobs
Technical PM jobs: hh.ru ("technical program manager" / "technical product manager"), Habr Career, getmatch, LinkedIn (international TPM segment — primary source for this role), Telegram (product and tech communities, job channels). The real market is wider than exact search — the role is named differently and overlaps with regular PM jobs with a technical lean.
Technical PM vs other directions
Technical PM — technical branch of the PM / PO direction. Tightly connected with regular Product Manager (product variant — /research/pm/product-manager) and Project Manager (TPM as programme management — /research/pm/project-manager). Main career source — engineering (/research/backend, /research/devops, /research/architect). Comparison of pm specialisations — in the SiblingSubnichesChart above.
Volume of open jobs across IT directions.
Latest jobs
Latest open Technical PM jobs — the most recent 10 positions with adequate description quality. NB: the name hides two roles — Technical Program Manager and Technical Product Manager; look at responsibilities. The full list is in our CRM or via the "see all" link below.
What we can offer
If you work with Technical PM jobs or you're in this role yourself — we can close a specific task. Pick a format, leave a contact — we reply within 24 hours.
Frequently asked questions
The most common questions about Technical PM: pay, grades, skills and tools, Technical Program Manager vs Technical Product Manager, Technical PM vs regular PM / Project Manager, what Technical PM does, whether engineering background is needed, remote, companies, how to start, Senior skills. Answers recompute automatically.
How much does a Technical PM earn in 2026?
The median Technical PM salary is $6250/mo per Zorky CRM data (167 active jobs). Junior —, Middle $6250/mo, Senior —, Lead —. Technical PM — one of the highest-paying management roles in IT: technical depth plus management skills are a scarce combination. Real 2026 bands: Middle Technical PM / TPM at Russian tech companies — $3,000-5,000/mo, Senior — $5,000-8,000, Lead / Principal TPM — $7,500-12,000. At large tech companies and fintech — higher. At international companies on full-remote a Senior — $7,000-14,000+ (TPM — a notable and well-paid role in global big tech). Technical PM on average earns more than a regular Product Manager and Project Manager of the same grade — due to the requirement of real technical expertise.
What does a Technical PM Junior, Middle, Senior, or Lead earn?
Technical PM salary ladder (median USD/mo): Junior —, Middle $6250/mo, Senior —, Lead —. Pure Junior Technical PM openings are almost non-existent — this is not an entry role: it requires real technical experience, so people come into it already as accomplished engineers or experienced PMs with a technical background. Middle Technical PM leads a technical programme or technical product of medium scale. Senior is responsible for large cross-team programmes or a significant technical product. Lead / Principal TPM works at the level of large initiatives and several programmes. Career flow: developer / team lead / architect → Technical PM / TPM → Senior → Principal TPM / Head of Technical Program Management, or into product or engineering leadership.
How much do Technical PMs earn in Moscow, St Petersburg, remote?
Moscow: Middle Technical PM — $3,000-5,000/mo, Senior — $5,000-8,000, Lead / Principal — $7,500-12,000+ (at large tech companies and fintech higher). St Petersburg — similar bands. Minsk / Kyiv — 10-25% below Moscow. Poland — €4,500-8,500 gross. 28.7% remote. International companies hire Russian-speaking Senior Technical PM / TPM on full-remote — $7,000-14,000/mo (in global big tech TPM is a prestigious and well-paid role). English for the international market is mandatory. Technical PM income directly depends on technical depth and scale of programmes / products they are responsible for.
What skills and tools are most often required of a Technical PM?
Top tools: visio, databricks, mongodb, ms project, jira. Technical base (mandatory role condition): understanding of system design and architecture (microservices, cloud, infrastructure, databases), API, development processes and CI/CD, technical trade-offs; SQL; for many Technical PMs — real past development experience. Management tools: Jira + Confluence, programme planning and tracking tools, Miro, dashboards and metrics. Key skills: cross-team dependency management — TPM's main skill: coordinate many teams, see and unblock dependencies and bottlenecks; technical risk management; technical judgement — understand the essence of technical decisions enough to participate in trade-offs and ask the right questions; planning complex programmes; communication — translate between engineers, product, and leadership, convey technically complex clearly; stakeholder management; influence without power (like regular PM). For the product variant (Technical Product Manager) — plus product skills: discovery, metrics, roadmap, understanding of developer experience and what developers need as users. English — for the international market. Main thing: Technical PM is valued precisely for the combination — they are technical enough that engineers take them seriously, and management enough to lead a programme or product.
Technical Program Manager vs Technical Product Manager — what's the difference?
The name "Technical PM" hides two different roles, and it's important to distinguish them. Technical Program Manager (TPM) — about execution of complex technical programmes: coordinates large technical initiatives involving many teams (migrations, platform launches, infrastructure projects, cross-team technical goals); main focus — management of dependencies between teams, technical risks, timelines of a complex programme; TPM is closer to project-programme management, but with deep technical knowledge. They usually don't own the product and don't decide "what to build" at the product level — they ensure that the complex technical is delivered. Technical Product Manager — this is a Product Manager (decides what and why to build, owns strategy and roadmap, is accountable for the result) for a technical product: API, platform, infrastructure, dev tools, ML platform; their users are developers and engineers, so technical depth and understanding of developer experience are needed. Roughly: Technical Program Manager is responsible for execution of a complex technical programme; Technical Product Manager owns a technical product and decides what it should be. Both roles require a strong technical background — this is what unites them under "Technical PM". When reading a job posting, look at the essence: "coordination of programmes and dependencies" — TPM; "product strategy and roadmap" — Technical Product Manager.
Technical PM vs regular Product Manager and Project Manager — what's the difference?
Regular Product Manager is responsible for the product but more often works with products for end users (consumer, business), where understanding of market and users matters more than deep tech (see /research/pm/product-manager). Technical Product Manager — the same but for a technical product (API, platform, dev tools), and so requires real technical depth; their "users" are developers. Regular Project Manager leads projects, managing timelines, budget, risks, but without requiring deep tech (see /research/pm/project-manager). Technical Program Manager (TPM) leads complex technical programmes from many teams, and technical depth for them is mandatory — they participate in technical trade-offs and manage technical dependencies, which a regular Project Manager doesn't do. Key Technical PM difference overall — mandatory technical expertise: both TPM and Technical Product Manager must understand the tech enough that engineers treat them as equals, participate in architectural discussions and make technically grounded decisions. So people almost always come into Technical PM from engineering. By pay Technical PM is on average higher than regular PMs and Project Managers — for the scarce combination of management and tech.
What exactly does a Technical PM do?
Depends on the role variant. Technical Program Manager (TPM): 1) Takes a complex technical initiative covering many teams and drives it to result. 2) Manages cross-team dependencies — sees who is waiting for whom, where bottlenecks are, and unblocks them; this is their main skill. 3) Manages technical risks — identifies in advance what may go wrong in a complex programme. 4) Participates in technical discussions and trade-offs — deep enough to ask the right questions and help make decisions. 5) Plans the programme, holds timelines and status transparency. 6) Translates between engineers, product, and leadership. Technical Product Manager: 1) Owns a technical product — defines what it should be, forms strategy and roadmap. 2) Works with developers as users — understands their needs, engages in developer experience, API design. 3) Does discovery, works with product metrics, prioritises. 4) Is accountable for the product result. Common: both roles constantly work at the intersection of deep tech and management, require participating in engineering discussions as equals and at the same time leading a programme or product through influence and coordination. Technical PM — the one who connects "how it's technically structured" with "how to manage it and where to lead it".
Does a Technical PM need an engineering background?
Yes — and this is the main distinction of Technical PM from regular PMs. The role requires real technical depth, and most Technical PMs (both Technical Program Manager and Technical Product Manager) come from engineering — former developers, team leads, architects, sometimes DevOps / SRE or data engineers. Why this is mandatory: Technical PM is constantly in technical discussions — they must understand system design, architecture, API, infrastructure, technical compromises enough that engineers treat them as equals, that they can ask the right questions, assess risks and realism, participate in architectural decisions and not be "bypassed". Without this depth, a person can neither coordinate a complex technical programme (TPM) nor meaningfully own a technical product (Technical Product Manager). Do you need to continue coding: no — Technical PM doesn't usually write production code themselves, it's a management role; but they must understand code and technology deeply and keep knowledge current. Conclusion: Technical PM — essentially a career fork for engineers who are interested in management, coordination, and product but don't want to lose the technical connection; "entering Technical PM from scratch without technical experience" — practically impossible, unlike regular product management.
Can Technical PMs work remotely?
Yes, 28.7% of Technical PM jobs are remote or hybrid. The work (programme coordination, technical discussions, planning, communication) is done well at a distance. Nuance: TPM coordinates many teams and stakeholders, and in large organisations hybrid is sometimes more convenient for this. International companies actively hire Russian-speaking Senior Technical PM / TPM on full-remote — $7,000-14,000/mo: in global big tech TPM is a notable role and demand for strong specialists is global. English for the international market is mandatory. Remote format and specialist scarcity with the "tech + management" combination make the role especially profitable for working from anywhere.
Which companies actively hire Technical PM?
At the top: Yandex, Sber, VK. Technical PMs are especially in demand where there are complex technical systems and many teams. Large tech and product companies: Yandex, VK, Avito, Ozon, Wildberries — cross-team technical programmes, platforms, infrastructure; here the TPM role is most developed. Fintech and banks: Sber, T-Bank, Alfa-Bank — complex technical landscapes, platform teams. Telecom: MTS, Beeline, MegaFon — large technical systems. Companies with platform and infrastructure products, cloud providers (Yandex Cloud, VK Cloud, Cloud.ru), dev-tools and B2D products — for Technical Product Manager. International companies — actively hire Russian-speaking Senior Technical PM / TPM on full-remote (TPM — mass role in global big tech). Demand is sustained, especially for strong specialists; the role is scarce due to the requirement of combining tech and management.
Where to start a Technical PM career in 2026?
Technical PM is not an entry role; people come into it from engineering, and this is a conscious career fork for engineers. Typical path: 1) First gain real technical experience — work as a developer, team lead, architect, DevOps / SRE; without a technical base you can't become a Technical PM. 2) In the engineering position take on management tasks — coordinate cross-team tasks, lead technical initiatives, communicate with stakeholders, engage in planning; this way management experience is gained without leaving tech. 3) Develop management skills — programme and dependency management, risks, communication, stakeholder management; for the product variant — product skills (discovery, metrics, roadmap). 4) Decide on the role variant — closer to coordination of complex programmes (Technical Program Manager) or to owning a technical product (Technical Product Manager). 5) Maintain technical currency — follow architecture, cloud, tools, even after stopping coding. 6) English — for the international market where the role is especially developed and well-paid. Transition usually happens inside the company — an engineer who already actually coordinates a programme formalises this into the Technical PM role; or transition to a TPM role at a large tech company. Resources: programme management and TPM materials (the role is well described in global big tech practices), system design, product materials for the product variant. Main thing — not "learn Technical PM from scratch" but grow into the role from a strong engineering base.
What skills does a Senior Technical PM need?
A Senior Technical PM leads the largest technical programmes or significant technical products. Deep technical expertise: confident understanding of system design, architecture, infrastructure, API, development processes — at a level allowing equal participation in architectural discussions, assessing technical trade-offs and risks, and being an authority for engineers. Complex programme management: lead large initiatives from many teams, decompose, plan, hold status transparency under uncertainty. Dependency management: see the whole dependency map between teams, predict bottlenecks, unblock them in advance — main Senior TPM skill. Technical risk management: systematically, at the scale of a complex programme. Technical judgement: help make correct technical and architectural decisions, ask the right questions, see consequences. Stakeholder management and communication: translate between engineers, product, leadership; clearly convey technically complex; work with top management. Influence without power: lead programme and teams through authority, trust, and arguments. Strategic thinking: link the technical programme or product with business goals. For the product variant — product mastery: discovery, metrics, roadmap, deep understanding of developer experience. Mentoring: development of Junior Technical PMs. English — for the international market. The main value of a Senior Technical PM — drive to result the technically most complex, multi-team, uncertain initiatives, while remaining an authority for both engineers and business.
Similar specializations
Methodology
- Data period: in the hero and copy — the last 3 months. In the charts — the full available observation period (since parsers were launched, usually 2-3 months).
- Data is collected automatically from 1000+ sources — Telegram channels and job boards across CIS and Europe.
- Only live open jobs with a clear description are counted. Spam and duplicates are filtered out.
- Salaries are converted to USD/month at the current rate. Outlier values (lt;500 or gt;50K) are filtered out.
- Levels are normalized: Mid → Middle, Intern/Trainee → Junior, Principal/Staff/Expert → Lead.
- The first 2 weeks of data (parser ramp-up period) are not shown in the charts.
- Data is recomputed every day.
Authorship and citation
Analytics prepared by Zorky Research Team. Last updated: May 29, 2026 at 6:31 PM.
Data sources and methodology
Data is collected automatically from 1000+ sources — Telegram job channels and job boards across CIS and Eastern Europe (HH, Habr Career, Djinni, DOU, NoFluffJobs, JustJoin.it, Pracuj.pl and others). Parsing runs 24/7, duplicates are filtered by description and URL, salary outliers are stripped. Detailed methodology — on the "How it works" page.
Zorky CRM (2026). Technical PM in IT: CIS and Europe market. Accessed: 5/29/2026. URL: https://zorky.tech/en/research/pm