Skill Demand Index
Based on 1 scored job postings out of 2,412 total. Depth levels reflect actual proficiency tiers, not just keyword presence.
0%
Demand Rate
L3
Median Depth
0%
Gap Rate
1
Jobs Analyzed
Proficient
Most employers want Commercial Fluency at hands-on daily use, not textbook knowledge.
Overview
Market context for Commercial Fluency in the current job market
Commercial Fluency is required in 0% of scored job postings on ShouldApply, making it a growing skill in the current job market. Employers looking for Commercial Fluency typically want candidates who can demonstrate real proficiency, not just surface awareness.
What the data shows for Commercial Fluency:
What L3 means in practice:
L3 (Proficient) means daily professional use. You should be able to work independently with Commercial Fluency without needing supervision or constant guidance.
This means employers aren't looking for someone who has used Commercial Fluency once or twice. They want evidence of professional application — shipped work, measurable outcomes, and the ability to operate independently.
Common skill gaps:
The gap rate of 0% means most candidates have adequate Commercial Fluency proficiency. To stand out, aim for L4-L5 depth with concrete evidence.
Depth Level Distribution
How candidates match Commercial Fluency requirements across 1 scored evaluations
Average depth: L3.0·Median depth: L3.0
Salary Correlation
How Commercial Fluency affects compensation based on postings with disclosed salary data
Without Commercial Fluency
$137K
Median $130K
450 jobs
Skill Demand Insight
“Commercial Fluency appears in 0% of all scored jobs.”
From 1 scored job postings
Skill Pairings
Other skills that frequently appear alongside Commercial Fluency
Gap Analysis
How often Commercial Fluency is identified as a skill gap (L0–L1) in scored applications
Very low gap rate — candidates generally have this skill
When Commercial Fluency appears in a job's requirements, 0% of scored applicants received an L0 or L1 (missing or minimal).
Yes. Commercial Fluency appears in 0% of scored job postings on ShouldApply, making it a growing skill in the current market. Based on 1 analyzed jobs, demand is steady across multiple role types.
The median required depth is L3. Most roles expect intermediate competency — independent work without supervision.
Salary data for Commercial Fluency is still accumulating.
The most common pairings are Travel, Time Zone, Revenue Retention, Customer Success Management, B2B SaaS. Strengthening these alongside Commercial Fluency improves your fit across more positions.
Top roles: Other. Other positions have the highest demand at 100% of all Commercial Fluency jobs.
L1→L2: online courses and personal projects. L2→L3: daily professional use and shipped work. L3→L4: mentoring others and optimizing processes. L4→L5: architecture decisions, open source contributions, or published work.
See how you stack up against Commercial Fluency job requirements
ShouldApply scores your profile against each skill at the depth level jobs actually need.
Analyze my Commercial Fluency gaps →See how your depth compares to what employers actually require
All Skills · Roles · Companies · Browse Jobs