Introduction to consulting – jack of all trades master of some https://jackofalltradesmasterofsome.com/blog Consultant - Real Estate - Author - Business Intelligence Mon, 29 Apr 2019 18:43:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 Introduction to Consulting – Free eBook Download https://jackofalltradesmasterofsome.com/blog/2019/04/29/introduction-to-consulting-free-ebook-download/ Mon, 29 Apr 2019 18:36:02 +0000 http://jackofalltradesmasterofsome.com/blog/?p=424 Get your Free eBook

With all the interest I received for free copies of my book (Jack of All Trades Master of Some, An Introduction to Consulting) for anyone that was a student or unemployed, I’ve decided to make a new
ebook available perma-free for download. “An Introduction to Consulting – A Primer” is a shorter version including major key elements and is now free from my website under the “free stuff” section. I hope you all find it valuable!

For more insight into an Introduction to Consulting, check out my book Jack of All Trades Master of Some, An Introduction to Consulting.

Check out the rest of the series tied to the book on the blog as well!

Introduction to Consulting – Free eBook Download

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Introduction to Consulting – Why People Hire Consultants. The Math. https://jackofalltradesmasterofsome.com/blog/2019/04/26/why-people-hire-consultants-the-math/ Fri, 26 Apr 2019 02:11:17 +0000 http://jackofalltradesmasterofsome.com/blog/?p=420 Why People Hire Consultants. The Math. Consultants can usually run a rate of anywhere in the range of one hundred to two hundred dollars an hour. Some larger firms in the “Big Four” can charge up to six hundred dollars an hour for senior resources. Multiply that by the average of forty hours a week and fifty or so weeks a year, and it is easy to see how that adds up to more than you will see in your paycheck. Sorry to break it to you. What a consultant bills is never what they pocket in salary for reasons we will soon discuss.

When I first started consulting and reviewing my own billable rate, I could not even process how and why companies would pay that kind of money for someone like me. For that kind of money, companies could pay the salary of three or four versions of myself for the same period. It just did not add up.

There are a few major reasons most companies will hire consultants instead of hiring their own employees:

The work is project-based

The first major reason it makes sense for a company to hire a consultant is that the needed work must be completed in finite time with limited scope. Although the cost of the project can be high, a client will save thousands of dollars by not having to hire long-term, full-time resources. They can pay highly skilled, subject matter experts to come in and knock out the job. After completion, they can send the consultants on their way and transitioning the ongoing support to existing employees as a portion of their day job. The initial cost of the project is considered an investment with a long-term payback.

The work is temporary

Similar to project-style work, sometimes a company is simply short staffed. Maybe it is the year-end, maybe Mary is on maternity leave, and maybe they just need an extra hand hitting a deadline. In these cases, this work is usually called “Staff Aug,” short for Staff Augmentation. Staff augmentation is where the current staff is supplemented by consultants for a limited time. The cost in this scenario is temporary because the role is temporary.

Consultants don’t get benefits

The cost of a company’s full-time employee exceeds his or her salary. Companies pay for the employee’s desk, computer, parking pass, coffee, perks and—most importantly, the second most expensive item next to salary—benefits. With most reputable companies now offering retirement matches and health care benefits, the usual cost of an employee is over 20% beyond that person’s salary. This is where the cost of hiring a consultant can begin to make a lot more sense.

The work is hard

Many times, a company will bring in a consultant because they just cannot do the work themselves. The work may be too complicated, or the organization may not have enough time or resources to complete the work on time or at all. Finding an expert to assist in complicated tasks is usually very hard to find and even more expensive to hire for the long-term. This is where specialty firms and their resources can flourish. Deep expertise in a business domain, an industry, or a technology drives most of the work for consulting firms.

The work is mandatory

Mandatory or regulatory work is where Big Four firms make much of their money. Audit season, Tax season, Merger and Acquisition reviews can be the reason you see an empty conference room get invaded by forty new folks dressed in the basic business casual starter kit and travel laptop. It is not rare to see these consultants working 80 hours a week, ordering take-out, hunching over documents and filling out spreadsheets. This type of work is necessary either by law/regulations or is required because of due diligence work. This is frequently where consultants get started.

For more insight into an Introduction to Consulting, check out my book Jack of All Trades Master of Some, An Introduction to Consulting.

Check out the rest of the series tied to the book on the blog as well!

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Introduction to Consulting – Impostor Syndrome https://jackofalltradesmasterofsome.com/blog/2019/04/16/introduction-to-consulting-impostor-syndrome/ Tue, 16 Apr 2019 01:01:12 +0000 http://jackofalltradesmasterofsome.com/blog/?p=405 As time passes and you get more experience under your belt, you will find yourself answering questions and leading meetings like you have been working in the client’s industry for decades. At this point, as you self-reflect on the flight back home, you may get hit with a feeling of anxiety known as impostor syndrome. What makes you the expert? Are you really as knowledgeable as everyone thinks you are? Am I an imposter, a fraud, a con man? A Jack of No Trades, a Master of None…just faking it and fooling everyone at a billable rate I do not deserve. This feeling is common in many consultants due to the high velocity required to switch roles and learn new businesses, processes and technologies. It is completely normal to feel the self-doubt and the inability to appreciate your own skill and knowledge. In consulting, when you start a new project, you will have to dance the dance while you get comfortable and get your feet under you, but drawing the line of when you transition from not knowing to knowing can create a false insecurity from time to time. Remember to take a step back and give your skills of a smart, adaptive and creative consulting credit for being as good as they really are.

For more insight into an Introduction to Consulting, check out my book Jack of All Trades Master of Some, An Introduction to Consulting

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