It feels like 2001 again, only worse. Clients are very cost conscious and looking to make savings wherever they can. Budgets are being cut and people are being laid off in large numbers. For researchers and analysts that are not absolutely essential to securing revenue, this can be a precarious time, and already we are seeing more applications from people recently retrenched.
But as we see it (and I really don’t wish to sound callous), this is a great time to be in a freelance-based business because we can really help clients solve major problems. Here’s a case in point - in the last few months we’ve been working with a couple of large companies (an advertising conglomerate and a specialized consulting company) to see how we can save them money. They both value research and the work of analysts but times are tough and they need to make savings. What can we do?
Well, we can do two things straight off:
- We can be there in reserve for them after they have made layoffs, picking up any work their reduced team can’t manage. So if the economy suddenly picks up or they land a large contract, they will still be able to get the research and analysis done. This gives them the confidence to make deep cuts and capture savings as fast as they can.
- We can help clients move a lot of their costs from fixed to variable (we don’t require clients to pay for FTEs or commit to a minimum level of work, which gives us an advantage over pretty much all other offshore providers). This is a major benefit to clients. It means they don’t have to carry a large research overhead and need only pay for research and analysis work when they actually need it.
Costs per hour for external vendors can look much higher than the average hourly rate of employees, but this is a flawed way to make the comparison. Contractors are only paid for each hour of work they actually do, so a fairer comparison would put employees and contractors on the same measure, like this:

Employee costs Vs. Contractor costs
A dated (2002) National Federation of Independent Business review that looked at marketing specialists (we do a lot of work in marketing too) came to the same result:
The following example compares the actual yearly cost for hiring an in-house marketing specialist, as opposed to outsourcing marketing needs to a freelancer.
Say that the rate for a freelance public relations/ad writer is $75/hr. That hourly rate may seem high when compared with the $20 you might expect to pay for an in-house employee handling PR duties. But if the freelancer were contracted for 10 hours of work per week, over a year the actual cost would be: $75 x 10 hours per week x 50 weeks = $37,500. There are, of course, no benefits or company overhead to consider for a freelancer.
The salary of an in-house PR person at $20 per hour would be $20 x 40 hours per week x 52 weeks (assuming two weeks of paid vacation) = $41,600. Not much different from $37,500 for the freelancer, right? But to calculate the actual cost of the in-house employee, you need at add benefits (which usually total about 30-40% of salary) and in-house overhead (usually about 35-50% of salary). This brings the actual cost of an in-house employee up to $41,600 salary + $12,480 for benefits + $14,560 overhead = $68,640. And that’s on the low side. Benefits and overhead percentages frequently go much higher.
Using these calculations, you’d save more than $30,000 by outsourcing your marketing needs, even at a rate of $75/hr for a skilled freelancer. However, when your company’s need for marketing increases, you may end up using the freelancer for 25 hours or more per week. At this level, it begins to make sense to hire a full-time in-house employee.
A final point worth making is that all these calculations assume using a locally-based contractor, which is costly option. With time and planning we can save clients much more money on their knowledge-based work by building teams of individuals that combine individuals in low-cost countries with some in the client’s home country.
So back to those two companies. It’s early days but things are going ok. One company laid-off 12 researchers the other laid-off three and in both cases we are now doing a lot more ad hoc work for them, but more importantly, we have taken over some ongoing projects -analyzing quarterly earnings and competitor profiles, and writing some newsletters - all of which is saving the companies money but at the same time freeing in-house analysts to focus on higher-value work. This downturn will be grim, by any measure, but it has already started to create opportunities for companies that can help companies save money at the same time as improving their operations, and that has to be a good thing.