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I am a software development consultant myself and would like to have a better understanding of why (many) companies prefer to hire (often expensive) consultants instead of any of a number of alternatives.

/Update/ Here is a question about the difference between "consultants" and "contractors". I think the definition of what a consultant really is has been watered down for commercial reasons. Strictly speaking I'm a contractor, not a consultant, but consultant is how I'm defined by my employer. I know this is not entirely correct. That is why I qualify the term "consultant" by prefixing it with "software development".

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Two possibilities: 1) companies are run by idiots, 2) you're missing something. – Shog9 Jan 24 at 0:20
Probably both :-) – Seventh Element Jan 24 at 0:26
How is this question argumentative?? – Joachim Sauer Jan 30 at 22:01
This is just sad. The question got rated to a six (God knows how many downvotes) and produced answers that got up to +33! yet it's closed as argumentative and subjective. Whatever! – yar Feb 18 at 0:36
I think the question in its current state is hardly argumentative. Certainly subjective, but definitely career-relevant to many programmers. – Rex M Feb 18 at 4:16

closed as subjective and argumentative by Shog9, tvanfosson, Robert S., George Stocker Jan 24 at 16:47

7 Answers

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To name a few...

  • Consultants are usually for short term assignments (even if it is 1+ years).

  • Consultants are sometimes better because they hop from project to project and become experts in the technology rather than experts in the product they are writing or supporting. Consultants can bring experience from many different job sites and apply them to your problem. Their job-hopping is an advantage as compared to a full time employee's job-hopping as being a disadvantage.

  • Consultants can be replaced very quickly if they do not work out. Even process of populating a team quickly with consultants can be much less daunting than finding experienced full time programmers to build a large team quickly.

  • Charges for consultants can be shown differently on expense reports, than salaried employees. And Keep in mind that usually a salaried employee costs 25-50% more than the actual salary when other expenses are factored in (taxes, training, insurance, eventually severance, etc...) and consultants aren't always more expensive.

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No one ever got fired for buying IBM

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although quite a few went broke – Jim Anderson Jan 24 at 3:06
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consultants can:

  • provide specialized skills not available to the current team
  • be written off as a non-payroll expense (maintenance, capital development, etc.)
  • be hired and fired with no HR overhead
  • fill in for staff shortages
  • be locked down to a fixed price for a given set of functionality
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Employee salaries are a deductible expense as well. I don't think I'd use that argument in my sales pitch. – Ian P Jan 24 at 1:32
@[Ian P]: see edit - everything is an expense, but it comes from different budget 'buckets' in many businesses – Steven A. Lowe Jan 24 at 16:37
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Here's one more. Companies can usually write it off as a capital expense which makes up for the cost. Also employees cost more than just their salary (usually 25 - 30% more)

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Companies can write of employee salaries as well. I do not get this argument at all. They do not have to pay "both sides" of employment tax in the US, but that's a rather moot point given the fact that any business worth their weight in salt knows that. – Ian P Jan 24 at 3:00
Consultant fees are variable costs (supposedly good) while salaries are fixed costs (supposedly bad). Since a department can be evaluated by the ration of variable to fixed costs, this can make you look good on paper. – Treb Jan 28 at 13:31
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Holding a development team is expensive expecially for non software firm. Even though it might be better for them if their team works, finding a consultant team is much safer and cheaper in the long run.

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Non-Software companies hire them because they don't build software.

It would be like not hiring an architect and you're about to build a house when you haven't before.

Experience in more than one area, wide range of experience, results and track records are valuable.

Personally, I think it's better to hire resultants, instead of consultants. It's always nice to be told what we need to be doing or what we didn't do by a consultant. Resultants marry their clients problems and change the course of their business for the better.

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I understand your point about non-software companies hiring consultants so I have voted up your answer. But I don't have a clue what a "resultant" is... – Seventh Element Jan 24 at 11:07
A resultant is someone who does not confuse activity with results. Or confuse progress with results. Consultants are usually consulted to tell clients what is happening, or should be happening, or might happen. Resultants are ones who are obsessed with delivering measurable results. – Jas Panesar Jan 24 at 23:35
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Because they don't like the answers they are getting from their development team, and consultants can always come up with better numbers (Valid or not).

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Yup, consultants can lie about the possibility of a task without the fear of getting fired. – Spikolynn Jan 24 at 3:26
I've seen it quite a few times, and been on the "Happy" end of it more than once. I worked for a couple "salesmen from hell"--I'm telling him it'll take 2 months, and he tells me "the customer says we're doing it in 2 weeks". I said Okay, we were late, they paid us more. – Bill K Jan 24 at 3:43

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