Originally posted by RasputinDude
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Reply to: What is an "employed consultant"?
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Previously on "What is an "employed consultant"?"
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Upside - you pay peanuts and get monkeys. So the idea dies a death for another few years until another agency thinks of the scheme.
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Originally posted by RasputinDude View PostSounds like a short, fixed term on-payroll gig to me.
The typical model is to tell companies that they can reduce their contract cost by removing contractors and replacing them with their own 'employed consultants'. They then offer the contract roles on a fixed term employee basis at a much lower rate than they would have been on a daily rate. Winning applicants become employees of the agency for the period of the contract.
Downside - you are an employee
Upside - not a lot
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Originally posted by oldgit View PostI've obviously missed something, but what is an Employed Consultant. I don't mean a management consultant employed by Deloittes, for example, but I'm seeing this on some IT contract adverts at the moment.
I think its an attempt to embed freelancers into consulting companies over longer terms. I have a few irons in this sort of fire myself. This is good
The down side of this would be crap like managed benches where an employment agency tells a customers you belong to them and you are their b!tches. This is bad
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What is an "employed consultant"?
I've obviously missed something, but what is an Employed Consultant. I don't mean a management consultant employed by Deloittes, for example, but I'm seeing this on some IT contract adverts at the moment.Tags: None
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