I have worked for third party consulting companies for 5 years. Companies hire my company to do a job or issue guidance and then leave. If I am on the bench, I still get paid. I report status to the client company and they are ultimately responsible for signing off on work. But they don’t manage my work.
I’m not embedded into their team, we might embed them into our team. But at the end of the day, we are leading the projects.
Then you have staff augmentation “consultants” like you are referring to.
I saw both sides a few years ago when I was the dev lead for a company. We hired both staff augmentation “consultants” where we paid the contracting agency $90/hour and the end consultant got $60-$65 and we also paid the AWS consulting companies $160/hour and I have no idea what they got paid. But it was a lot more.
That’s what made me work on pivoting to cloud consulting in 2018. I didn’t know AWS when we hired the consultants.
I have worked for third party consulting companies for 5 years. Companies hire my company to do a job or issue guidance and then leave. If I am on the bench, I still get paid. I report status to the client company and they are ultimately responsible for signing off on work. But they don’t manage my work.
I’m not embedded into their team, we might embed them into our team. But at the end of the day, we are leading the projects.
Then you have staff augmentation “consultants” like you are referring to.
I saw both sides a few years ago when I was the dev lead for a company. We hired both staff augmentation “consultants” where we paid the contracting agency $90/hour and the end consultant got $60-$65 and we also paid the AWS consulting companies $160/hour and I have no idea what they got paid. But it was a lot more.
That’s what made me work on pivoting to cloud consulting in 2018. I didn’t know AWS when we hired the consultants.