I've read a lot of articles on here about billing for independent consultants, but I can't seem to find anything about working for a consulting firm. This is for a small firm that serves a very niche market, so I'm not even sure where to begin looking for salaries to compare. Any help would be appreciated.
So he can charge commensurately.
The question I would ask you is how does your prospective employer charge? Are they just billing hours and charging? Are they delivering projects that have clear value outputs like patio11? Is their profit related to the number of hours you work (bums on seats), or could you do a days work and move them from 2-4% conversion as well?
Now ask how does your prospective employer make its money - usually they charge the client X and pay you .6x and pocket the difference.
Their risk is not having projects to charge X and still paying you .6X.
So - you could do three things
1. take the usual salary of X - employee consultants tend not to get paid much differently to actual employees - so try glassdoor.
2. Are they open to you taking on risk - that is can you get .9X for the willingness to get 0X if no projects come in the door? You are then a freelancer, and they simply find the jobs.
3. Are you willing to take on that risk? If so you probably dont want to be an employee
Now here is my question: From what I understand consulting is different from implementation. If you go into project management and supervise the process of implementation everything can be value based.
But what happens when you stick to a classic consulting perspective i.e. leave the implementation for others to do? Meaning when patio11 would pack his bags after running through his presentation and recommendations, what is he going to bill his value on? Based on "predicted" savings/revenue?
I somewhat fear that value based consulting draws the consultant into the nitty gritty of implementation, almost becoming a project manager of his suggestions for optimizations. And if somebody else screws up along the implementation process, it is going to stick with the consultant's reputation.
Can anybody comment on that?
Three months later they have enough of his brain cells in their heads they can wave goodbye.
Personally I would love to sit in an armchair at the Diogenes club and have people come pay me for my opinion on what they should do. If that was ever a consultants role I think it is long dead.
Yours
Mycroft
In your $10 million of value example, what would you say is a reasonable percentage of that to charge? It would be a bit more difficult to measure, but I think this firm could probably bill on a value-added basis as well.
It of course depends - doubling conversion for any company will be valuable, but they have done the hard work getting to this point and will rightly resent essentially an equity share.
A range of 2-5% would be something bearable, and probably more so if presented as fixed sums, and increasing along measurable KPIs so instead of I get 5% of whatever happens, something like 20k fixed per week and 50k if user conversion hits 3% for project X and 100k if it hits 4% across all user categories.
Essentially you need to have a clear idea of what they want out of the deal, a feasible number that you can increase by, and slice of 5% of that.
Also
If they would be better off switching to weekly billing, why not tell them. If younare just paid as a cog in their system thays how you will get treated. If you think you can do a lot better, why not reduce your and their risk - work for them at a low (bearable) fee - but you get to lead a project and get bonus payments on hitting clients business kpi improvements.
This way you have some safe harbour of salaried job but also are incentivised to go all out for the client
Just a thought
As in ALL things, you will only get what YOU think YOU are worth....do not expect others to pay you a nickel more than what they believe YOU BELIEVE YOU are worth. Good Luck !!! Much Success.
Regards, J
The fact the firm might bill a client a large multiple of that for your time is irrelevant: they take on the risks and responsibilities associated with winning the business and overheads and probably add value to your time with some combination of reputation, proprietary data/software/methodology, other team members, training and support etc.