Missouri's two major metros — Kansas City and St. Louis — each offer substantial data analyst markets with different industry mixes. Healthcare, financial services, and tech create diverse opportunities at a very affordable cost of living.
15 jobs found
Senior IT Business Analyst
Rawlings Sporting Goods Company Inc — St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Experienced Support Engineering Data Specialist
Boeing — Berkeley, Missouri, United States
Item Creation and Data Specialist
Custom Truck One Source — Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Senior Financial Analyst
Eurofins USA Medical Devices — St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Senior Data Specialist
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia — Saint Louis, Missouri, United States
Senior Financial Analyst
Boeing — Hazelwood, Missouri, United States
Experienced Financial Analyst
Boeing — Hazelwood, Missouri, United States
Financial Analyst
Accounting Career Consultants — Saint Louis, Missouri, United States
Business Intelligence Analyst (Data Analyst / Power BI)
Public Safety Credit Union — Kansas City, Missouri, United States (On-site)
Business Analyst
Parsons — Springfield, Missouri, United States
What You Need to Know
Missouri benefits from having two distinct and sizable analyst markets.
Kansas City has a strong tech sector anchored by Cerner (now Oracle Health), the world's largest health IT company. Sprint/T-Mobile, Garmin, and a vibrant startup ecosystem in the Crossroads district add diversity. KC's analyst market emphasizes healthcare IT, telecom, and increasingly, fintech.
St. Louis offers a different mix, with major employers including Bayer (Monsanto), Centene Corporation, Emerson Electric, and Edward Jones. The city has a strong healthcare analytics sector (BJC HealthCare, Washington University Medical Center) and an established financial services market.
Both cities have invested in their tech ecosystems, with accelerators and venture capital increasingly available. Springfield has a smaller market centered on healthcare (Mercy, CoxHealth) and manufacturing.