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eCommerce Manager Salaries UK | D2C Pay Benchmarks

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ecommerce manager salaries

eCommerce Manager Salaries UK | D2C Pay Benchmarks

Salary & Market Data

eCommerce Manager Salaries UK
| D2C Pay Benchmarks

eCommerce manager salaries vary significantly depending on role type, seniority, and whether you are hiring for a growth-focused D2C brand or a traditional multichannel retailer. If you are a founder or Head of eCommerce building out your team, this guide gives you accurate UK pay benchmarks for every eCommerce manager role so you build a competitive salary structure before you open the first vacancy.

ecommerce manager salaries

£48k
Median eCommerce manager salary, UK D2C brands
LinkedIn Talent Insights, 2024
£75k+
Senior eCommerce growth manager salary, London D2C
Indeed UK, 2024
22%
London salary premium for senior eCommerce manager roles
Glassdoor UK, 2024
34%
Of D2C brands planning to grow eCommerce headcount this year
REC, 2024

Quick Answer

eCommerce manager salaries in UK D2C brands range from £32,000 for junior eCommerce executives to £90,000+ for senior growth managers at scale-up brands. The growth manager specialism commands a 15 to 25 per cent premium above generalist eCommerce manager roles at equivalent seniority, reflecting direct revenue accountability, performance channel ownership, and data depth that pure trading or operations roles do not require.


Market Context

eCommerce Manager Salaries: Why D2C Brands Pay Differently to Traditional Retailers

eCommerce manager salaries at D2C brands and traditional multichannel retailers diverge significantly, even for identical job titles. Understanding why is essential before you set a salary structure or evaluate an offer. The two environments demand different skill sets, carry different commercial accountability, and operate at different pace, all of which are reflected in pay.

At a D2C brand, the eCommerce manager typically owns the entire customer journey, from paid acquisition through to retention and repeat purchase. The role carries direct revenue accountability with no store estate to fall back on. At a traditional multichannel retailer, the eCommerce manager often focuses on a narrower digital channel scope within a larger commercial operation. According to LinkedIn Talent Insights, D2C brand eCommerce managers earn 12 to 20 per cent more than equivalent-title roles at traditional retailers at mid to senior level.

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D2C brand eCommerce roles

Full customer journey ownership from acquisition to retention. Direct P&L accountability. Higher pace, broader scope, greater commercial autonomy. Equity or profit share often part of the package. Salary premium reflects this breadth.

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Traditional multichannel retailer roles

Narrower digital channel scope within a larger commercial structure. More process, more stakeholders, slower pace. Stronger benefits and pension. Brand name recognition. Typically pays 10 to 20 per cent less than D2C equivalent at mid to senior level.

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Growth-stage and venture-backed brands

The highest eCommerce manager salaries in the D2C sector sit at venture-backed and growth-stage brands where the commercial stakes are highest. EMI share options, performance bonuses, and above-market base salaries are used to attract and retain talent at critical growth phases.

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Pure-play eCommerce businesses

Pure-play businesses with no physical retail estate typically pay at or above D2C brand rates, as every pound of revenue runs through the digital channel. The commercial weight on eCommerce manager roles at pure-play businesses is proportionally the highest in the sector.

What is an eCommerce growth manager?

An eCommerce growth manager is a senior eCommerce specialist focused on driving measurable online revenue growth across acquisition, conversion, and retention channels simultaneously. The role sits above a standard eCommerce manager in commercial scope, typically owning performance marketing, CRO, and customer lifetime value strategy as an integrated function rather than as separate channel responsibilities. It is most commonly found at D2C and scale-up brands where growth rate is the primary commercial objective.


Salary Data

eCommerce Manager Salaries UK by Seniority: D2C Brand Benchmarks

All figures are base salary only, excluding bonus, equity, and benefits. Sources: LinkedIn Talent Insights, Glassdoor UK, Indeed UK, and CIPD Pay and Conditions Report 2024. All figures in GBP. D2C brand ranges reflect a 12 to 20 per cent premium above traditional multichannel retailer equivalents. London ranges reflect an additional 15 to 22 per cent location premium.

Seniority Level D2C UK-Wide Salary D2C London Salary Typical Experience
eCommerce Executive / Assistant £28,000 – £36,000 £32,000 – £42,000 0 – 2 years
eCommerce Manager £38,000 – £52,000 £44,000 – £60,000 2 – 5 years
Senior eCommerce Manager £52,000 – £68,000 £60,000 – £78,000 5 – 8 years
eCommerce Growth Manager £55,000 – £75,000 £65,000 – £88,000 5 – 9 years, cross-channel
Head of eCommerce / eCommerce Director £70,000 – £100,000 £82,000 – £120,000 9+ years, P&L ownership
Salary compression at mid-level is a serious D2C retention risk.

Many D2C founders benchmark eCommerce manager salaries against what they paid their first hire two years ago, or against a job board advert from a larger retailer with a different commercial model. If your eCommerce manager has two to four years of genuine D2C experience and sits below £42,000, you are almost certainly below the current market. The cost of replacing them will exceed the cost of the pay rise.

What pushes an eCommerce manager toward the top of their salary band?

The variables that consistently push D2C eCommerce managers toward the upper end of their band are: demonstrable revenue growth with specific numbers they can attribute to their own decisions; cross-channel ownership spanning performance marketing, CRO, and retention simultaneously; experience managing significant advertising budgets (£50,000 or more per month); and the ability to build and manage a small eCommerce team rather than operating solely as an individual contributor.


Growth Manager Data

eCommerce Growth Manager Salary Benchmarks: What D2C Brands Are Paying

The eCommerce growth manager title has emerged at D2C brands as a distinct senior role sitting between eCommerce manager and Head of eCommerce. It is the role that owns the revenue growth engine: performance marketing efficiency, conversion rate optimisation, customer retention, and the commercial data infrastructure that connects them. It is priced accordingly.

Growth Manager Focus UK-Wide Salary London Salary Demand Level
Performance and Growth (paid acquisition focus) £55,000 – £72,000 £65,000 – £85,000 Very high
Conversion and Retention Growth Manager £50,000 – £68,000 £58,000 – £78,000 High
Full-Funnel Growth Manager (acquisition to LTV) £60,000 – £80,000 £70,000 – £92,000 Very high, scarce
Senior / Lead Growth Manager (team leadership) £70,000 – £90,000 £80,000 – £105,000 High, very scarce
Full-funnel growth managers are the scarcest profile in UK D2C eCommerce.

A candidate who can own paid acquisition efficiency, conversion rate optimisation, and customer retention strategy simultaneously, reporting all three against a single revenue growth KPI, is genuinely rare in the UK market. If you find this profile, move quickly and pay the top of the range. They will have multiple conversations active at any point in time, and a slow process will cost you the hire.

“The growth manager brief is the one we are asked to fill most often at D2C brands right now and the one with the widest gap between what founders expect to pay and what the market actually demands. Founders often anchor to a performance marketing manager salary and are surprised when a candidate who also owns CRO and retention strategy expects £15,000 to £20,000 more than that.” – Elite X Recruit, UK eCommerce recruitment specialists

ecommerce manager salaries

Role Type Comparison

eCommerce Manager Salary by Role Type at D2C Brands

The eCommerce manager title covers significantly different roles depending on functional focus. A trading and merchandising eCommerce manager operates in a very different salary bracket to a performance and growth-focused eCommerce manager, even at the same seniority level. Benchmarking by role type rather than title alone is essential for accurate salary planning.

eCommerce Manager Role Type Mid-Level UK Salary Senior UK Salary Primary KPIs
Performance and Growth eCommerce Manager £45,000 – £60,000 £60,000 – £80,000 ROAS, CAC, LTV, revenue
Trading and Merchandising eCommerce Manager £38,000 – £52,000 £52,000 – £68,000 Revenue, margin, conversion
Customer Retention and CRM eCommerce Manager £40,000 – £55,000 £55,000 – £70,000 LTV, repeat rate, churn
Product and Content eCommerce Manager £36,000 – £50,000 £50,000 – £64,000 Conversion, AOV, engagement
Generalist eCommerce Manager (D2C, all channels) £38,000 – £52,000 £52,000 – £68,000 Revenue, conversion, retention
Performance-focused eCommerce managers earn the most at D2C brands.

At D2C brands where paid acquisition is the primary growth lever, performance-focused eCommerce managers who can demonstrate ROAS data, CAC improvement, and LTV modelling consistently command the highest eCommerce manager salaries. If you are hiring for growth, do not benchmark against a trading or content-focused eCommerce manager salary. The profiles are different and so is the market rate.


Location Premium

London vs UK-Wide: The Location Premium for D2C eCommerce Manager Roles

The London salary premium for D2C eCommerce manager roles sits between 15 and 22 per cent above equivalent roles in other UK cities, according to Glassdoor UK data. London has the highest concentration of D2C and growth-stage eCommerce brands in the UK, particularly in fashion, beauty, wellness, and consumer goods, which drives both volume of roles and salary premium.

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London D2C brands

Full London premium applies. The concentration of funded D2C brands, fast-growth startups, and venture-backed eCommerce businesses in London drives both the highest salaries and the most competitive candidate market in the UK.

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Remote-first D2C brands

Many D2C and growth-stage brands operate fully remote or hybrid as a deliberate talent strategy. UK-wide benchmark applies, though strong candidates will negotiate upward. Define your remote salary policy before advertising.

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Manchester and Leeds D2C scenes

Manchester and Leeds have growing D2C brand clusters, particularly in fashion, sport, and FMCG. eCommerce manager salaries sit 8 to 14 per cent below London equivalents but the candidate market is less competitive, making hiring faster and easier at mid level.

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Growth-stage brands attract nationally

The most compelling D2C brands with genuine equity upside, strong culture, and high commercial autonomy attract strong candidates regardless of location. Mission and growth trajectory can partially offset a location salary differential if the equity and bonus structure is right.


Total Package

Beyond Base Salary: Equity, Bonus and Benefits at D2C Brands

The total compensation package at a D2C or growth-stage brand looks materially different to a traditional retailer. Base salary is often just one component, and for the right candidate at the right stage of a brand’s growth, equity and performance bonuses can significantly outweigh the base salary differential between a D2C brand and a larger corporate employer.

1

EMI share options

Enterprise Management Incentive (EMI) share options are the single most powerful recruitment and retention tool available to UK D2C brands. A modest equity grant at a brand in its growth phase can bridge a base salary gap of £10,000 to £20,000 for candidates who believe in the business trajectory. If you are a founder who has not yet thought about your EMI scheme, speak to your accountant before your next senior hire.

2

Revenue and growth performance bonus

A structured performance bonus of 10 to 25 per cent of base salary tied to clear revenue growth, ROAS, or LTV targets is standard for eCommerce growth manager roles at D2C brands. It aligns the candidate directly with the commercial outcome the business needs and is viewed very positively by commercially motivated candidates who are confident in their ability to deliver.

3

Advertising budget autonomy

Giving a growth manager genuine autonomy over the paid acquisition budget without requiring approval for every campaign decision is a stronger motivator than a small salary increase for commercially confident candidates. It signals trust and the kind of commercial ownership they are seeking.

4

Tools, software, and learning budget

Providing access to the right analytics tools (Northbeam, Triple Whale, Klaviyo, Hotjar, Optimizely) and a dedicated learning budget of £1,500 to £2,500 per year signals a serious growth operation. Candidates who are serious about their craft notice what tools a business does and does not invest in.

5

Flexible working and founder access

Senior eCommerce managers at D2C brands actively value direct access to founders and the ability to influence the commercial strategy at a whole-business level. This is something a large corporate employer simply cannot offer. Make it explicit in the offer conversation if it applies.


Red Flags

Red Flags When Setting eCommerce Manager Salaries at D2C Brands

These are the salary planning mistakes that D2C founders and Heads of eCommerce consistently make, and the ones that consistently cost them the best candidates or result in hires that cannot deliver at the level the business needs.

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Anchoring to your last hire’s salary

eCommerce manager salaries have moved materially over the past two to three years. What you paid your first eCommerce manager is not a reliable benchmark for your next hire. Check live market data before you set the range, not when you receive your first offer rejection.

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Expecting a growth manager at a generalist salary

If the role requires cross-channel growth ownership, paid acquisition expertise, CRO, and retention strategy, it is not a generalist eCommerce manager role and should not be priced as one. The profile you are describing commands a 15 to 25 per cent premium over a standard eCommerce manager salary.

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Offering equity instead of a competitive base

Equity is a compelling addition to a competitive offer. It is not a substitute for one. Offering a below-market base salary with equity attached signals to candidates that you do not value them at the market rate. The strongest candidates will decline and the offer will attract those who cannot get the market rate elsewhere.

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Not defining the role scope before setting the budget

At D2C brands, the eCommerce manager role scope varies enormously from business to business. Define exactly which channels the role owns, what the reporting line is, whether they manage a team, and what the commercial KPIs are before you set a salary range. Each variable shifts the correct market rate by £5,000 to £15,000.

A wrong eCommerce manager hire costs a D2C brand more than it costs a large retailer.

At a large retailer, a poor eCommerce manager hire is diluted across a large team and multiple channels. At a D2C brand where the eCommerce manager owns the primary revenue channel, the impact of a wrong hire is immediate and significant. The REC estimates the cost of a mis-hire at mid-management level at three times the annual salary. Paying the market rate for the right candidate is the correct commercial decision every time.

✅ Key Takeaways: eCommerce Manager Salaries at D2C Brands

eCommerce manager salaries at D2C brands run 12 to 20 per cent higher than equivalent titles at traditional retailers. Always use D2C-specific benchmarks, not generic eCommerce manager salary surveys.

Growth manager profiles command a 15 to 25 per cent premium over generalist eCommerce managers at equivalent seniority. If the role owns acquisition, CRO, and retention simultaneously, price it as a growth role not a standard manager role.

Equity bridges the gap but does not replace a competitive base: EMI share options at the right growth stage can offset a salary gap of £10,000 to £20,000 for the right candidate. They are an addition to a competitive offer, not a substitute for one.

London adds 15 to 22 per cent: the D2C brand concentration in London drives both the highest salaries and the most competitive candidate market. Remote and hybrid models open the talent pool nationally.

Define the role scope before setting the budget: at D2C brands, eCommerce manager scope varies enormously. Define channels owned, team responsibility, and commercial KPIs before setting a salary range.

Validate before advertising: a conversation with a specialist D2C eCommerce recruiter confirms immediately whether your salary range will attract the candidates you need.

● REC Member  ·  UK eCommerce Specialists

Hiring an eCommerce Manager for Your D2C Brand?

Elite X Recruit works exclusively in eCommerce recruitment across the UK. Our consultants know exactly what growth managers, performance eCommerce managers, and senior eCommerce hires are earning at D2C brands right now. We can tell you immediately whether your budget is competitive, help you structure an offer that includes equity and bonus correctly, and introduce you to candidates who are not on job boards.

Bottom Line: eCommerce Manager Salaries at UK D2C Brands

eCommerce manager salaries at UK D2C brands range from £28,000 for junior executives to £105,000+ for senior growth managers in London. Growth-focused profiles command a significant premium over generalist eCommerce managers. Equity, performance bonus, and budget autonomy are as important as base salary at this level. Define the role scope precisely, benchmark against D2C-specific data, and validate your range with a specialist before you advertise.

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Use the D2C-specific salary tables above to benchmark your exact role type, not a generalist eCommerce manager average, before writing your job description.

2

Define whether you need a growth manager, a trading manager, or a generalist before setting the salary. The correct market rate differs by £10,000 to £20,000 between these profiles.

3

Speak to a specialist D2C eCommerce recruiter before going to market to confirm your salary range, equity structure, and offer is competitive for the current UK market.


FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

01What is the average eCommerce manager salary in the UK?

The average eCommerce manager salary in the UK is approximately £42,000 to £52,000 at mid-level, based on LinkedIn Talent Insights and Glassdoor UK data for 2024. At D2C brands specifically, the range sits 12 to 20 per cent higher than at traditional multichannel retailers. London roles command a further 15 to 22 per cent above UK-wide equivalents. Growth manager roles within eCommerce sit materially above the generalist eCommerce manager average.

02How much does an eCommerce growth manager earn in the UK?

An eCommerce growth manager in the UK earns between £55,000 and £90,000 depending on seniority and role scope. Performance and acquisition-focused growth managers at D2C brands earn £55,000 to £72,000 at mid-level and £70,000 to £90,000 at senior level. Full-funnel growth managers owning acquisition through to LTV command the highest salaries in the bracket, particularly in London where top-end senior roles exceed £100,000 in total package.

03Do D2C brands pay more than traditional retailers for eCommerce managers?

Yes, typically 12 to 20 per cent more at mid to senior level. D2C eCommerce manager roles carry broader commercial accountability, higher pace, and greater autonomy than equivalent titles at traditional retailers. Growth-stage and venture-backed D2C brands additionally offer EMI equity and performance bonuses that traditional retailers rarely match, making the total compensation package materially higher even when base salaries are comparable.

04What is the difference between an eCommerce manager and an eCommerce growth manager?

An eCommerce manager typically focuses on day-to-day commercial operations: site trading, merchandising, channel management, and performance reporting. An eCommerce growth manager owns the revenue growth engine across acquisition, conversion, and retention simultaneously, using data modelling and commercial strategy to drive LTV and CAC efficiency. The growth manager role is more senior, broader in scope, and commands a 15 to 25 per cent salary premium over a standard eCommerce manager at equivalent experience levels.

05Should D2C founders use a recruiter for eCommerce manager hiring?

For mid-level and above, particularly for growth manager and senior eCommerce manager roles, a specialist eCommerce recruiter adds significant value over job boards alone. At D2C brands where the wrong eCommerce hire has an immediate and significant commercial impact, the value of a recruiter who can accurately qualify technical skills, commercial track record, and D2C brand fit is particularly high. A specialist like Elite X Recruit focuses exclusively on eCommerce, meaning faster access to the right candidates and accurate D2C salary benchmarking from day one.

06What KPIs should an eCommerce growth manager be measured against?

An eCommerce growth manager should be measured against: online revenue growth (total and by channel); customer acquisition cost (CAC) by channel; return on ad spend (ROAS) across paid channels; customer lifetime value (LTV) and LTV:CAC ratio; repeat purchase rate and retention metrics; and conversion rate from key traffic sources. A performance bonus structure tied to these KPIs aligns the candidate directly with the commercial outcome the D2C brand needs and attracts the most commercially motivated candidates.

07How long does it take to hire an eCommerce growth manager at a D2C brand?

Hiring an eCommerce growth manager at a D2C brand typically takes six to ten weeks from brief to accepted offer, assuming a competitive salary, a clear and compelling brief, and an efficient interview process. Full-funnel growth managers, who are the scarcest profile in the market, can take eight to twelve weeks. Strong candidates at this level will typically have multiple conversations active simultaneously. A slow process or a below-market offer will cost you the hire at the final stage.

08What eCommerce manager skills are most in demand at D2C brands right now?

The most in-demand eCommerce manager skills at UK D2C brands currently are: multi-touch attribution modelling (Northbeam, Triple Whale, or GA4); Meta and Google Performance Max campaign management at scale; Klaviyo lifecycle automation and segmentation; CRO methodology and testing frameworks; LTV modelling and customer cohort analysis; TikTok Shop and social commerce management; and applied AI for creative testing, content personalisation, and campaign optimisation. Candidates combining commercial judgement with deep technical platform knowledge in these areas consistently command the highest eCommerce manager salaries in the UK D2C market.

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