Consultancy Fees for a Someone Who's Not a Consultant?
Consultancy Fees for a Someone Who's Not a Consultant?
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Panthro

Original Poster:

701 posts

235 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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A small manufacturing business has contacted me based on my previous employment in a fairly niche industry and asked for my help in building their procurement and supply chain. They want to move from sub 1000 pieces to 2-3000 pieces per year in a strategic growth model but would like my contacts and experience to enable them to do this.
The first problem is I have another full time job; however, I'd love to be able to help them as it's a great product and a space in which I enjoy working in so I'll try to squeeze it in on evenings and weekends.
The second problem is that I've never done consultancy, have no idea what I should charge and not much of an idea how long it will take until I really delve in and see the business plan and future development strategy. I expect it would be at least 6 months work. Within the space I work in (procurement and supply chain) many day rates for experienced hires and managers are £400-£600 a day.

Any advice would be welcomed.

85Carrera

3,503 posts

254 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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Check your employment contract; it probably prevents you from taking on other employment (or requires your employer's consent to do so).

deckster

9,631 posts

272 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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If it's a significant piece of work then I don't see any way that you can do a good job by squeezing it into evenings and weekends. And as above, that would almost certainly impact the quality of your day job.

Only you know your circumstances, but it seems that you've got a great opportunity to build your skills and CV by taking on something potentially exciting and new in a relatively low-risk way. If there genuinely is six months' work there then I'd open up a negotiation with the business to see how genuine they are about using and paying for your experience (and make sure that it is your experience they want, not your contacts) and then if it all stacks up, jump in with both feet.

Panthro

Original Poster:

701 posts

235 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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85Carrera said:
Check your employment contract; it probably prevents you from taking on other employment (or requires your employer's consent to do so).
No issues around that.

StevieBee

14,315 posts

272 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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There's two ways you can approach it.

The first is to agree a day rate and the number of days needed to do the work. The day rate is really up to a combination of what you feel you're worth, what they're willing to pay and the market rate. For this they would likely require you to time sheet the work so you will need to determine minimum charge time per day (quarter day, half day, etc.).

However, if you can, I would try to work on a lump-sum basis. You work out the days you need and the price per day. The sum of this is the total fee and is up to you to provide the work within that limit regardless of the actual time you spend. So if you need 50 days but do it in 30, you're quids in... but if you end up spending 70 days, your day rate will suffer. But is a lot less bother and no need to time sheet.

Check payment milestones and key dates before you commit.

Al Gorithum

4,663 posts

225 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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I'd be inclined to ask them what they're offering to see if it's worth your while. My consultancy fee is £1500+vat per day.

VEIGHT

2,376 posts

245 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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Agreed, take your time - have a look at the work load then get a good idea by asking them first what their budget is for this.

Last thing you want to do is charge £200 per day and they tell you that’s great as they were expecting it to be double that!

Sounds like a great gig especially if you enjoy that sector.

Doofus

31,354 posts

190 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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I work with SMEs for, say, one day a week, or four days per month over a long term. For those, I'm around £450 - £500 per day.

I also do short-term projects, again for SMEs, which may require three or four days per week, but only for a month, or two or three. For those, I tend to be around £500 to £750 per day.

I'm not a 'consultant', though. Rather than telling them how to do the job, I actually do the job. I'm a temp, I suppose. smile

Pit Pony

10,293 posts

138 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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Al Gorithum said:
I'd be inclined to ask them what they're offering to see if it's worth your while. My consultancy fee is £1500+vat per day.
Reading the OPs post, it looks like his skills are in Manufacturing Engineering. Maybe call it Manufacturing strategy?

I'm.a Chartered Manufacturing Engineer, and Six Sigma Black belt, and work freelance as a consultant.

Typical rates tend to be £35 to £45 an hour. Outside IR35.




DSLiverpool

15,641 posts

219 months

Monday 28th June 2021
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Al Gorithum said:
I'd be inclined to ask them what they're offering to see if it's worth your while. My consultancy fee is £1500+vat per day.
Are you a mate of Matt Hancock ?

Al Gorithum

4,663 posts

225 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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DSLiverpool said:
Are you a mate of Matt Hancock ?
No. I have better taste biggrin



Panthro

Original Poster:

701 posts

235 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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Thank you all for the advice. I assume I'll need to set myself up as a limited company too?

Countdown

45,010 posts

213 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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Panthro said:
Thank you all for the advice. I assume I'll need to set myself up as a limited company too?
No (you can do but you don't HAVE to). But you will need to register with HMRC and fill in a self assessment at year end.

Mr Pointy

12,580 posts

176 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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Panthro said:
Thank you all for the advice. I assume I'll need to set myself up as a limited company too?
No, you can operate as Sole Trader (or even a Pertnership, but that's probably not relevant) which means you register for Self Assessment. You might want to engage an accountant for pointers about how to keep records & have a think about registering for VAT, although that does depend on how big a deal this consultancy is going to be. Insurance might be wise (Public Liability & maybe Professional Indemnity) & don't forget to make sure your car insurance is Business Class 2. Think about a separate email account - gmail looks a bit more professional than Hotmail. Your own domain name might be going a bit far at this early stage.

https://www.contractoruk.com/
https://www.caunceohara.co.uk/

Pit Pony

10,293 posts

138 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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Panthro said:
Thank you all for the advice. I assume I'll need to set myself up as a limited company too?
Depending how much you expect to turn over.

There are 2 advantages to limited.

If you are salaried elsewhere, you can take the net profit (after 19.5% corporation tax) as Dividend.

And limited liability. So you may not need professional indemnity insurance. But you might need public liability insurance. But Often contracts say you have to have it.

As I eluded to in a private message, if the income is not needed right now, you could keep it in the LTD company, and pay it out at a later date, or pay it into a pension (depends on your age, but I'm 54 and I can see that would be a good idea)

There are downsides to limited too, because self assessment is easier to do in my opinion, so you end up paying an accountant.


APontus

1,935 posts

52 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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Also, if you pay yourself in divis, HMRC are likely to want payment of anticipated tax on account after the first year, half in Jan and half in August. You can choose not to, but if you go on to pay yourself dividends again there may be an interest penalty.

TooLateForAName

4,889 posts

201 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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Go limited company. If you are advising on major projects you do not want personal liability.

MustangGT

13,452 posts

297 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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TooLateForAName said:
Go limited company. If you are advising on major projects you do not want personal liability.
Taking out insurance is the effective way. In cases of negligence the court can lift the 'veil of incorporation' in any case.

craigjm

19,571 posts

217 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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Doofus said:
I'm not a 'consultant', though. Rather than telling them how to do the job, I actually do the job. I'm a temp, I suppose. smile
A consultant can be many things on the consulting spectrum from a pair of hands at one end as you describe to a strategic advisor at the other end and many steps in between.

Doofus

31,354 posts

190 months

Tuesday 29th June 2021
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craigjm said:
Doofus said:
I'm not a 'consultant', though. Rather than telling them how to do the job, I actually do the job. I'm a temp, I suppose. smile
A consultant can be many things on the consulting spectrum from a pair of hands at one end as you describe to a strategic advisor at the other end and many steps in between.

I'm well aware of that, thank you. That's why I put it in inverted commas. I'm not what most people think of as a consultant.