CFO (magazine) Audience in Germany

CFO (magazine) logo

CFO (magazine) has an estimated audience of 227,585 people in Germany. 43.4% are female, 56.6% are male, average age 39.2. Top regions: Nordrhein-Westfalen, Bayern, Baden-Württemberg.

The average CFO (magazine) fan in Germany is 39.2 years old, more male, and lives primarily in Nordrhein-Westfalen. The audience is concentrated in Nordrhein-Westfalen, Bayern, Baden-Württemberg.

Category: Business & Career · Type: Website / Newspaper / Magazine

Demographics of CFO (magazine) fans

Demographic split for CFO (magazine) audience in Germany
MetricValue
Female43.4%
Male56.6%
Average age39.2
Estimated audience size227,585

Top regions in Germany

Top regions ranked by reach for CFO (magazine) in Germany
RegionReachAffinity
Nordrhein-Westfalen59,4091.19×
Bayern47,7421.31×
Baden-Württemberg41,3341.33×
Hessen25,4941.47×
Niedersachsen22,7241.03×
Berlin13,1871.3×
Rheinland-Pfalz11,5171.01×
Sachsen9,2400.83×
Schleswig-Holstein8,0580.99×
Hamburg6,5821.28×
Brandenburg4,7550.67×
Thüringen3,9070.67×
Sachsen-Anhalt3,4110.58×
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern2,3620.54×
Saarland2,1490.77×
Bremen2,0121.03×

Worldwide distribution

Worldwide audience distribution share by country for CFO (magazine)
CountryShare
Brazil21.4%
Japan15.5%
United States6.1%

See CFO (magazine) audiences in other countries

More Business & Career audiences in Germany

How to read this data

Audience size is the estimated number of people in Germany who actively search for CFO (magazine). Affinity is an over-index ratio: 2.0× means the audience is twice as likely to engage with that brand or trait as the country average. Reach is the estimated number of audience members in a region. Regional and brand-affinity tables are sorted from strongest signal to weakest.

About this audience profile

This audience profile is generated by Rascasse from anonymized search-behavior signals across Germany. For methodology see methodology. Affinity values are over-index ratios vs. the country average (1.0 = baseline). Audience sizes are estimated, not measured.