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I am considering working for a consultant that charges a known rate, lets say $100/hour. As a contractor working for the consultant, what hourly rate should I expect?

Edit:

  • This could become a permanent source of work.
  • It is mostly Rails work.
  • I do know that the business overhead is low - everyone works from home with their own equipment.
  • I am not adding skills the consultant or his current contractors don't already have.
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6 Answers

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If the main contractor is billing $100/hr then the subcontractor can likely expect $50/hr or less. As mentioned by others, if you are a hot-shot developer and the main contractor is trading on your name, then you can expect more - up to 100% of that rate (but likely far less - like 65%). It depends on the norms for your market, your skill-set/credentials and also on the size and reputation of the main contractor.

When negotiating your rate, keep in mind that the main contractor likely has spent unpaid hours developing the proposal (and other failed proposals) to get that contract. They likely have professional liability insurance which can cost thousands a year. Their contracts are likely reviewed by lawyers, etc. then they run the risk of not getting paid when the contract is completed. They may have spent years earning the trust of their clients. The difference in rates generally reflects that.

If you have no idea, then let them make an offer. If you feel that the offer is too low, then you can make a counter offer or ask for a rationale. Most reputable contractors will be happy to explain their offer to you since they are trying to build an ongoing relationship with their subcontractors.

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The most you can get is correct but I tend to believe the mix is like 60/40. If a consulting company is billing 100hr for you the you should get about 60 percent. But if you are doing a corp to corp with the consultant you should take a little more like 65/35 or even 70/30 if your a great professional. It all depends how you feel about the consultant if you believe they have a strong interest in seeing you work and bill hours you should let them have more but if you feel they are only using for this particular contract/project then hike up the price as much as you can.

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If your're both in the same expertise area, then the consultant hires you to do profit on your head. Don't expect much more than 50% of his rate in that case, considering that he may have additional costs to your work.
If your expertise areas differ, it might be more a matter of empowering his consultancy without necessarily expecting real profit on your work. Then you might expect more.

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As low as they can get you to agree to. :P

In my experience rates are market driven, rather than some sort of industry-standard or global percentage -- the rate that you will be paid will be based on what they can find similarly-skilled people to work for, and the rate they charge the client will be based on what other contract placement companies can get for your skillset.

The market rates are going to vary by city and specialty, based on the available workforce.

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The most you can get :) Seriously though it depends the "larger" the consultant the more they tend to try and keep, more overhead. The smaller the more flexible they are sometimes.

EDIT:

The fact, if it is a fact, that they are willing to share the information of what the end client is being billed is an encouraging sign, most companies will not share that information voluntarily. If you think this could be a longer term relationship then I would take that into consideration.

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Can you negotiate your rate? I'd say whatever you can negotiate for.

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