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[nycphp-talk] Followup: Going weekly rate for phpdeveloper/coderin NYC these days?

edward potter edwardpotter at gmail.com
Thu Jan 18 13:27:23 EST 2007


I have found that FT employees ALWAYS have to get involved in office
politics, worry about doing what the boss wants them to do, and toe
the line.  Contractors can say the direction this is going is all
wrong - you can be much more independent, that's why they are worth a
BIG premium, they they don't lose their edge, don't have to please
everyone, and don't have to worry about not getting invited to the
office picnic.

Or as I've said to the CEO (as a contractor): what you are doing here
is totally stupid, you have to change course.
CEO:  damn, you're right, NO one here ever told me that before. They
just yes me to death.

Just my 2 cents!  :-)  ed

On 1/18/07, Nicholas Tang <ntang at communityconnect.com> wrote:
> I guess a lot depends on whether you look at it as an employer or as an
> employee.  From my perspective in terms of what I'd be willing to pay a
> contractor, it's nowhere near 2.5x what I'd pay a full-time employee.
> I'd pay them what I'd pay a full-time employee plus the savings in
> benefits, which is more like 120% instead of 250%.  If they're
> especially critical, maybe 150%.  I also prefer to hire full-time people
> most of the time.  ;)
>
> > Money for vacation, sick and personal time - Consulting for yourself,
> > you don't work, you don't get paid
>
> Yup.
>
> > Retirement funds - Somebody has to pay me to golf everyday and travel
> > after I'm 65 1/2 ;-)
>
> Yup.
>
> > Medical and life insurance - This is the expensive part,
> > without a bulk
> > discount, insurance is like $2000 a month
>
> Yup.
>
> > Business equipment/space/expenses - Somebody's got to pay the rent for
> > your office space and equipment and related expenses
>
> A lot of contractors work on-site, which eliminates these expenses.
>
> > Taxes - Uncle Sam wants his cut too, the figure varies but it's
> > somewhere between 25 - 30% of your pay...
>
> Us full-timers pay taxes too.  :)  If not, I'd be on a yacht right now
> instead of in the office.  ;)
>
> > Misc. Benefits - Enjoy that free coffee, gym membership, or other
> > activities at the office? Now you get to spring for them...
>
> True, with the caveat above.  (If a contractor's in our office, they can
> of course partake of any of the free coffee or other similar benefits as
> a full-timer.)
>
> > In addition, you are essentially running a business now so to
> > gather new
> > business you have to pay for advertising, treating new and existing
> > clients to lunch or dinner to promote new business, pay for your own
> > training and certifications, and those trips to MacWorld, GeekCruise,
> > etc...
>
> Yup.
>
> All of those are reasons why I never understood why so many companies
> hire so many contractors - if I had a choice between hiring someone for
> a 6 month contract, or to be a full-time employee for 15 months for the
> same rate, I'd hire them full-time in a second.  It makes no sense to me
> to pay such a huge premium for the same thing.  (And someone's value
> goes up to me over time as they learn how the company works, how our
> technology works, etc.  It can take weeks to get someone up to speed on
> a new environment and practices, and it's a lot easier to eat that
> "cost" over the course of full-time employment than if you bring in a
> short-term contractor.)
>
> Nicholas
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