Posted By Merv Newman
H&S consultants have to be very flexible, ie no fixed "package", but must have some idea of roughly how much work/time would be involved depending on the client company and their circumstances.
And the "depending" depends on where they are today. And where they want to be next year.
For a small company (less than a few hundred employees) we quote 1 day of preparation (in the office) "send us all the paperwork" (this can range from a few pages to a few kilos) then we go for a minimum of three days on-site, starting and finishing with management meetings (part of the analysis is how many managers turn up on time at these meetings)
Bigger sites take more time, but not much more (5 000 employees ? 5 days on-site)
We then reckon the equivalent time, 3 to 5 days, for preparing the report, analysis, synthesis and recommendations. And one day to go back, present the report and recommendations and work out a detailed future path.
First contract finished. (8 to 12 days) Send the bill. Further work/contracts depend on needs and take-up of the recommendations.
"Office-based" follow up is usually free (letters, phone calls, e-mails. So long as I don't have to get off my bum. Further on-site visits, follow-up or training, are charged at the day rate. (I'll get to "day-rate" in a minute)
We also charge for travelling and hotels. Mileage/kilometres charges can be at what the income tax people allow for employees to be paid travelling on company business or what the company is prepared to pay an employee for using own car for company business (usually a lot less) Hotels (bed, breakfast, evening meal) depend on country and town. For mileage and hotels we estimate how much that will probably cost and write it into the initial contract. This way the client has an exact cost to write on the purchase order.
Now the tricky one. Day-rate. How much do you think you are worth ? How much does your client think you are worth ?
And how many days each year do you want to spend away from your wife and family in some grotty (or five-star) hotel ?
Charge high and you get to do a lot of gardening. Charge low and you are on the road every day of your life.
Take out CoL, income tax, social security and think about how much you would like to end up with at the end of the financial year. comfortable, or rich ?
(there are actually a few rich consultants. Most of us go for comfortable)
You could research other consultants in you area (and not just H&S) and base your thinking around that. Compare experience and client bases (should there be an apostrophe in there ?) Are you reallyreally worth it ?
Or just think of a number. And double it.
And I do mean "double it". First, you will only ever work half the paid days your business plan says you will. 100/year, not 200. And, second, the really worthwhile clients, those who believe in you, will be prepared for the higher cost. And have higher expectations.
When I started I based fees on getting back to my previous salary level. Plus a bit. And was comfortable. Then I got offered a job I really did not want to do (uranium mines in Niger, 1 000 kilometres from civilisation, in the middle of a rebellion ?) So I doubled the price. They took it ! So you've gotta go. The armed escort thing was pretty relaxed anyway.
Be comfortable and do a bit of gardening.
Merv