Skills
43 skills are associated with this occupation.
0 skills selected
Essential knowledge
9 skills
Essential skills / competences
11 skills
Optional knowledge
6 skills
Optional skills / competences
17 skills
Explore GIS, geographic information systems and geodata work. This page gives an overview of what the occupation can involve, relevant skills, map context and ways to continue in Job Explorer.
A geographic information systems specialist works with collecting, structuring, analysing and visualising geographic information. The occupation can involve GIS, digital maps, geodata, survey data and spatial analysis used by public authorities, engineering teams, environmental projects and companies.
In practice, this occupation may be close to roles such as GIS specialist, GIS analyst, GIS technician or GIS engineer, depending on the employer and tasks.
Geographic information systems specialists work with spatial data: maps, coordinates, satellite or aerial imagery, land information and other geospatial sources. The work can include cleaning data, building map layers, preparing reports, analysing geographic patterns and helping other teams understand places, routes, land use or infrastructure. Some roles are close to surveying and cartography, while others are more analytical or software-oriented. In practice, the occupation often sits between geography, data analysis, engineering and digital mapping.
Useful specializations can include spatial databases, remote sensing, Python or SQL, web mapping, cloud-based geospatial platforms, environmental analysis, transport planning, utilities, energy, emergency planning or urban development. A more technical GIS specialist may work close to data engineering or software development, while another may focus on map production, field data, survey information or communication with planners and decision-makers. The strongest opportunities often come from combining geographic understanding with practical digital skills and clear communication.
Salary expectations for GIS specialists can vary widely across Europe. Country, sector, seniority, employer type and technical specialization all matter. Public-sector roles may offer stability and structured progression, while consulting, infrastructure, energy, technology or engineering employers may value more advanced data and software skills. Roles that combine GIS with programming, spatial databases, automation, remote sensing or cloud platforms may be positioned differently from more traditional mapping or technician roles.
A GIS specialist can move in several directions. One path is deeper geospatial analysis, working with environmental, transport, planning, energy or infrastructure data. Another is technical development, moving toward GIS developer, spatial data engineer, geospatial platform specialist or analytics engineer roles. Some people move toward project coordination, planning, surveying, cartography or data management. The occupation can also support career changes into climate analysis, urban planning, smart-city work, remote sensing or location intelligence, depending on education, sector experience and technical depth.
This occupation can look different from one employer to another. In a municipality it may involve planning maps, land information and public services. In an engineering company it may support infrastructure, surveying or environmental projects. In a technology-oriented team it may involve spatial databases, APIs, dashboards and automation. When comparing jobs, it is useful to look beyond the job title and check which tools, data types, sectors and responsibilities are mentioned. The same title can describe both a map-focused role and a highly technical data role.
This guide is editorial occupation context. It is not official labour-market statistics or salary data for this exact occupation.
43 skills are associated with this occupation.
0 skills selected
9 skills
11 skills
6 skills
17 skills
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— Jobs total — Countries with jobs
Cartographers and surveyors (2165)
| ESCO URI | http://data.europa.eu/esco/occupation/9af8907f-56a7-4170-83b1-3c6ba0997cfa |
|---|---|
| ESCO code | 2165.3 |
| ISCO group | 2165 |
| Concept type | Occupation |