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Trying to get rough comparison of day rate to Perm salary

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    #11
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    £45000 include employers contributions is around 54 grand

    Now add on 20 grand for admin and benefits roughly (this is what a contractor has to spend on "stuff" like the acountant)
    Now divide by 230 gives around £320 pre day.

    Pitch around 300-400. 350 wouldn't be a bad rate to offer.

    At the end of the day the market rate determines what you should pay, ie. contractor and permie adverts should bring in the same quality of CV. Try an advert at the low end (300) and see what interest there is.
    You pay £20 grand a year on accountants and admin?!?!?

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      #12
      Originally posted by JamJarST View Post
      You pay £20 grand a year on accountants and admin?!?!?
      1200 for the accountant and the rest as divs to the wife for all her office based services.
      Never has a man been heard to say on his death bed that he wishes he'd spent more time in the office.

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        #13
        Originally posted by Scrag Meister View Post
        1200 for the accountant and the rest as divs to the wife for all her office based services.
        Ok so in other words you have 1200 admin costs and the rest is tax fiddle

        Wait till NLUK gets here to ask you if your missus really does £18k worth of office services

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          #14
          Originally posted by JamJarST View Post
          Ok so in other words you have 1200 admin costs and the rest is tax fiddle

          Wait till NLUK gets here to ask you if your missus really does £18k worth of office services
          The actual difference is the cost of employement of a permie vs the company income needed to generate the same net income to the individual. On top of salary you have to factor in list of things, including employers taxes, lost pay due to holidays and sickness and bench time, assorted insurances, assorted expenses, training, pension provision and the rest of the things that permies get bundled in. Get to more senior roles where full fat BUPA and company cars come into play and the overheads go up even more.

          All of which is actually pretty academic in reality. Clients will pay what the market is paying for similar roles in the same industry in the same area. You can only name your rate if you have something exceptional to sell or have a fighting chance of saving the client more than you cost them, and even then you will be constrained by the end-client's budget.
          Blog? What blog...?

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            #15
            Originally posted by Scrag Meister View Post
            1200 for the accountant and the rest as divs to the wife for all her office based services.
            You dont pay Divi's in return for services, thats what a salary is for.
            "Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.

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