Hire Offshore Project Managers for Phoenix Businesses
Save up to 70% on project manager costs. Pre-vetted candidates in your timezone, onboarded in 2 weeks.
Key facts
- Starting price
- $2000/month full-time
- Phoenix mid-level benchmark
- $100,000/year
- Estimated savings
- 70% vs Phoenix rates
- Time to hire
- 2 weeks from kickoff to first day
- Vetting
- 5-stage process, top 3% of applicants
- Guarantee
- 30-day no-cost replacement
You can hire a pre-vetted offshore project manager in about 2 weeks through Remoteria, starting from $2,000 per month for a full-time dedicated PM. Offshore project managers scope projects, break work into epics and stories, build realistic timelines, run sprint planning and standups, manage stakeholder communication, track risks and blockers in a living register, own status reporting, and write the documentation and post-mortems your team keeps forgetting to write. They work with 6–8 hours of real-time overlap with your team, communicate fluently in written and spoken English, and typically save US businesses 60–70% compared to a local PM at $95,000 per year. Every candidate we shortlist has run real sprints on Agile, Scrum, or Kanban teams, holds at least one PM certification (PMP, CSM, PSM, or equivalent), and walks through a live project plan during the final interview. Onboarding begins with a project inventory, team introductions, tooling review, and a gap analysis on current planning in week one. By week two sprint and standup cadence goes live across priority work with a risk register shipped to leadership. By month two your PM has taken full ownership of reporting, risk management, and cross-team coordination so leadership stops getting dragged into day-to-day project firefighting.
Project Manager salary: Phoenix vs. offshore
In Phoenix, a project manager earns an average of $105,000 per year according to the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics — Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler Metro (SOC 11-3021). An equivalent offshore hire averages $31,200 per year — a savings of $73,800 annually (70% lower).
| Experience level | Phoenix (BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics) | Offshore | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junior | $70,000 | $21,600 | $48,400 |
| Mid-level | $100,000 | $30,000 | $70,000 |
| Senior | $145,000 | $42,000 | $103,000 |
US salary data: BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics — Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler Metro (SOC 11-3021). Offshore figures based on Remoteria placements.
Why Phoenix businesses hire offshore project managers
Phoenix used to be a bargain labor market, but the TSMC plant in north Phoenix and the broader semiconductor buildout have pushed mid-level wages up noticeably over the last three years. Supply chain analysts in Chandler and Tempe now start above $78,000, construction project managers across the Valley frequently cross $110,000, and fintech operations roles in Scottsdale run $85,000 or more. The biggest offshore-hiring users are semiconductor suppliers and advanced manufacturing firms in Chandler, real estate and homebuilders in Scottsdale and the North Valley, financial services and fintech startups downtown and in the Camelback Corridor, and independent healthcare practices across the metro from Mesa to Glendale. Phoenix founders benefit because Arizona skips daylight saving, which normally creates headaches for coordinating with offshore teams but actually works in your favor — your overlap window stays steady every month, so operational rhythms do not break twice a year when the rest of the country shifts clocks. The TSMC Fab 21 build in north Phoenix has been the biggest single shock to the local labor market in a generation. The first phase opened in 2024 with thousands of process engineers, technicians, and supply chain professionals, and a second fab is already under construction. The CHIPS Act funding pulled additional semiconductor investment from Intel, Amkor, and ASE into the broader Chandler corridor, and the cumulative effect has been a 15–20 percent compression in the local engineering and supply chain talent pool. Three industry pressures define the operational layer. Semiconductors and advanced manufacturing in Chandler, Tempe, and the new TSMC corridor in north Phoenix bid up process engineering and supply chain wages even at smaller suppliers. Real estate and construction across Scottsdale and the North Valley competes for project coordinators with Lennar and DR Horton during the homebuilding upcycle. And independent healthcare practices across the Valley feel constant pressure from Banner Health on revenue cycle and prior authorization talent. Offshore hiring lets each segment hold the line on G&A while the Arizona growth story keeps playing out.
Top Phoenix industries
- • Semiconductors and advanced manufacturing
- • Financial services
- • Real estate and construction
- • Healthcare
- • Technology and SaaS startups
- • Logistics and distribution
Major Phoenix employers
- • Avnet
- • PetSmart
- • Republic Services
- • Banner Health
- • GoDaddy
- • Insight Enterprises
Timezone: America/Phoenix (MST, no DST). Most offshore hires can overlap 4–6 hours of your Phoenix workday, typically 9am–3pm local. Because Arizona does not observe DST, you run on Mountain Time in winter and effectively match Pacific Time in summer — your overlap window holds steady year-round.
Top Phoenix companies competing for project managers
Offshore hiring is most valuable where local competition for this role is intense. In Phoenix, the following major employers drive up local salary benchmarks and make in-house project manager hires harder to close:
Avnet
Avnet's Phoenix headquarters is one of the largest electronics distributors in the world, employing thousands across supply chain, sales operations, and engineering services. Smaller semiconductor distributors and electronics suppliers across Chandler and Tempe cannot match Avnet's scale and routinely staff offshore for inside sales support, supply chain coordination, and quote management.
GoDaddy
GoDaddy's Tempe and Scottsdale campuses anchor a deep web infrastructure and SMB software footprint with thousands of customer experience, engineering, and product professionals. Smaller SaaS and SMB software startups in the Camelback Corridor cannot match GoDaddy's base comp and respond by building offshore customer support, content moderation, and engineering ops pods.
Banner Health
Banner Health is the largest hospital system in Arizona, employing tens of thousands across clinical, revenue cycle, and administrative roles. Independent physician groups and specialty clinics across the Valley cannot match Banner's benefits and pension structure and routinely build offshore prior authorization, claims processing, and patient coordination teams.
What an offshore project manager does
Project planning & scoping
- • Break projects into epics, stories, and tasks with clear acceptance criteria before work starts
- • Build realistic timelines based on actual team capacity instead of wishful-thinking estimates
- • Document scope boundaries upfront so scope creep has a place to live and get renegotiated
Sprint & timeline management
- • Run sprint planning, backlog grooming, and retrospectives on a fixed cadence
- • Facilitate daily standups that actually surface blockers instead of status theater
- • Track burn-down, velocity, and cycle time so the team sees its own delivery pattern
Stakeholder communication & reporting
- • Send weekly status reports with progress, risks, and upcoming decisions needed from leadership
- • Run stakeholder standups or office hours so execs stay informed without interrupting the team
- • Translate between engineering, design, and business so nobody talks past each other in a meeting
Risk & blocker management
- • Maintain a living risk register with owner, mitigation plan, and trigger date for each item
- • Escalate blockers within 24 hours and follow through until they clear rather than filing them away
- • Run pre-mortems before high-stakes launches to catch the failure modes the team is avoiding
Documentation & post-mortems
- • Keep a single source of truth in Notion or Confluence for every active project
- • Write post-mortems after launches and incidents with action items tied to owners and due dates
- • Document decisions and rationale so new team members can onboard without interviewing everyone
Tools and technologies
- Asana
- ClickUp
- Linear
- Jira
- Trello
- Notion
- Monday.com
- Slack
- Loom
- Confluence
- Google Workspace
- Miro
What to expect
- 1. Week 1: Project inventory, team introductions, methodology and tooling review, and a gap analysis on current planning and reporting.
- 2. Week 2: Sprint cadence and standups running live, status reporting template in place, and first risk register shipped to leadership.
- 3. Week 3+: Full project ownership across priority initiatives with weekly status reports, backlog grooming, and stakeholder office hours.
- 4. Month 2+: Process improvements shipped, portfolio-level reporting in place, and post-mortems cycling back into how the team plans the next project.
Pricing
Full-time offshore project managers start at $2000/month. No setup fees. Includes recruitment, vetting, onboarding, and account management.
Free replacement in the first 30 days if it's not a fit.
Frequently asked questions
Does your PM work in Agile, Scrum, Kanban, or Waterfall?
Whatever your team is already using. Our PMs are trained across Agile, Scrum, Kanban, and classical Waterfall, and most have run projects in more than one methodology. We do not parachute in and try to convert your engineering team to Scrum when they are running Kanban happily. What we do is respect the existing process, tighten the parts that are slipping, and only propose methodology changes after enough time watching the team to know what would actually help. If you want a specific methodology background on day one, flag it during intake.
How does the PM handle teams spread across multiple timezones?
With written-first communication and asynchronous updates by default. Your PM sets a standup format where engineers post status in Slack or Notion instead of forcing everyone onto a call at 7am local time, runs real sprint planning and retro meetings during overlap hours, and uses Loom for walkthroughs that would have been a 30-minute meeting. Most offshore PMs work 6–8 hours of overlap with US teams so critical decisions still happen in real time. The rest of the day is execution, documentation, and follow-up so your US team walks in to a clear status instead of a pile of open questions.
What authority does the PM have over the team members they manage?
That is up to you to define during onboarding, and we recommend putting it in writing. Typical offshore PMs have authority to run standups, assign tasks within an agreed scope, push back on unrealistic deadlines, and escalate blockers directly to leadership. They do not make hiring, firing, compensation, or performance review decisions. For client teams that want more authority delegated — sprint approval, roadmap prioritization, vendor management — we match senior PMs who can handle it and put the scope in the engagement agreement so nobody gets surprised.
How do you handle scope creep without becoming the department of no?
Scope creep is normal, so your PM treats it as a process rather than a problem. When a new request comes in, your PM documents it, sizes the impact against the current sprint or timeline, and takes the tradeoff decision back to the stakeholder: we can do this new thing if we drop or delay this other thing. That puts the decision back where it belongs, which is with the person who owns the priorities. The PM does not unilaterally say no, and they do not silently absorb the work and burn out the team — both failure modes you probably have today.
How often will we get status reports and in what format?
Weekly written status reports are the baseline — sent to a defined stakeholder list every Friday covering progress, risks, decisions needed, and next week priorities. On top of that your PM runs a monthly portfolio review for leadership and maintains a live dashboard in Notion, ClickUp, or whichever tool you use so anyone can pull current status without waiting for a report. For high-stakes projects or launches we add daily written updates during critical periods. Format and cadence are set with you in week one and can change whenever your reporting needs shift.
How does timezone work between Phoenix and an offshore virtual assistant?
Phoenix does not observe daylight saving, so you are on MST in winter and effectively on PT in summer. Your offshore hire overlaps your Phoenix workday from about 9am to 3pm local either way. The stable schedule means stand-ups, SLAs, and handoffs do not shift twice a year the way they do in most US cities.
Do you work with Phoenix semiconductor suppliers, real estate, and fintech firms?
Yes. Most Phoenix clients are semiconductor and advanced manufacturing suppliers in Chandler, homebuilders and real estate firms in Scottsdale and the North Valley, fintech startups in the Camelback Corridor, and healthcare practices across the Valley. We staff for supply chain support, transaction coordination, customer onboarding, and back-office ops built around those workflows.
How fast can a Phoenix business start offshore hiring?
Phoenix owners tend to want something practical and running quickly. Book a 15-minute intro, tell us the role, and we shortlist 3 vetted candidates within 5 business days. Most Phoenix clients interview on day 6 and onboard by day 10 without any timezone friction.
How does offshore hiring compare to Phoenix's local talent market?
Phoenix talent used to be cheap and the TSMC buildout ended that. A semiconductor supply chain analyst in Chandler now closes at $75,000–$92,000 base, a transaction coordinator in Scottsdale runs $62,000–$75,000, and fintech operations roles in the Camelback Corridor cross $85,000. Offshore hiring delivers comparable supply chain coordination, transaction support, and customer ops in 5 business days at roughly 35 percent of loaded Phoenix cost. The DST-free timezone is also a structural advantage — the overlap window does not shift twice a year, which keeps scheduling stable in a way other US metros cannot match.
Do Phoenix businesses have any special requirements for offshore hires?
Offshore contractors are not US tax residents, so Phoenix businesses do not withhold federal or Arizona state income tax, do not pay Arizona unemployment, and do not file W-2s. The standard form is a W-8BEN collected at engagement (not a W-9, which is for US persons) governed by an independent contractor agreement. Arizona has a flat 2.5 percent state income tax that applies only to US-resident workers, so the offshore relationship is fully outside that liability. Most Phoenix clients route payments through us, so they never deal with international wires or Arizona Department of Revenue filings directly.
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Written by Syed Ali
Founder, Remoteria
Syed Ali founded Remoteria after a decade building distributed teams across 4 continents. He has helped 500+ companies source, vet, onboard, and scale pre-vetted offshore talent in engineering, design, marketing, and operations.
- • 10+ years building distributed remote teams
- • 500+ successful offshore placements across US, UK, EU, and APAC
- • Specialist in offshore vetting and cross-timezone team integration
Last updated: April 12, 2026