Consulting offers IS professionals variety and
independence at a cost. Computer jobs top most lists
of career choices for the near future. Demand is
expected to remain high for programmers, systems
integrators, network and Internet experts and
database designers well into the 21st century. In
any of these areas, plus many more, you can easily
build a career within the corporate world. You can
work for consulting firms that farm out expert
talent to clients. Or, you can strike out on your
own and go into business as a specialist for hire or
an independent consultant. The last approach offers
some deceptively easy choices. With a little
knowledge of computers and some experience with
various software, you might be tempted to hang out
your shingle right now and try to cater to those
with less experience and knowledge in the field.
The pie is further sweetened by the fact that you don't need special degrees or
certifications to become an independent consultant. With your basic skills and
rudimentary knowledge, plus the ability to market your services, you may prosper
if you keep meeting the needs of enough customers.
Jumping feet first into consulting, then trying to learn the business by trial
and error, is a recipe for disaster in today's complex business arena, however.
One botched job followed by a whopping lawsuit could put you out of business in
a hurry, especially if you have not properly covered your legal bases. Plus, if
you know nothing about marketing and you don't feel comfortable with negotiating
prices and contracts, independent consulting may be the wrong career path.
What does it take to succeed as a computer consultant who runs his or her own
business? In this cover story, we take a long look into this question, comparing
the costs and benefits of independence versus corporate employment. Along the
way, we poll a short list of experts in the field.
For many people, Herman Holtz's name is synonymous with consulting. The Wheaton,
Md. author has penned a number of popular books on the art and business of
independent consultancy. His latest title is The Consultant's Guide to Getting
Business on the Internet: How to Network for Clients and Business Opportunities,
published by John Wiley & Sons.
According to Holtz, computer consultants, like many other professionals, are
specializing. Their specialties include training, repair and development. Says
Holtz, “The computer field is far too broad to even think of doing it all.
Today, there are many computer consultants who focus on just one or more
Internet-related functions as their specialties.”
While every successful consultant pursues one of many diverse specialties, they
typically run into the same fundamental issues associated with being in
business, Holtz points out. “All independent consultants are faced with
something of an anomaly in that they are specialists in the services they offer,
but they are generalists in that they run independent businesses and so must
also be prepared to handle the functions of administration and marketing. This
is no small challenge in itself.“Probably the most difficult and most important
challenge of this aspect of consulting is marketing and also highly important
and not easy to solve pricing one's services,” Holtz contends.
Diane Herrara, a consultant with 13 years of experience, now heads a “small but
growing” computer consulting business based in Southeastern, Pennsylvania. She
echoes Holtz's statement that you have to keep marketing “to keep the work
coming in.” For her, however, “the number-one issue I face is balancing my time
between getting a job done and staying educated. I do a phenomenal amount of
readingăjournals and magazines.” In her view, motivation and communication
skills are two essential keys to success. “You need to be self-motivated. You
need to be able to work on your own with little guidance. You need to be your
own project manager, know the milestones and be a good communicator. You need to
be able to discuss the projects with managers that you are working with as well
as with users of the project.”
The varied challenges she faces help her stay happy being a consultant. “I like
the feeling of being independent and being in charge of the project and seeing
it progress. I like choosing my next project. I like being in charge of my own
career development, ” she says. But being “in charge” of other things can be an
illusion, she adds. “As a consultant, you are often in a situation where you
have to manage things from a position of no power. You need to steer or guide a
company toward the right solution for the company. ” Often, the company,
believing it knows what is best for its future, does not heed a consultant's, or
outsider's advice. “It takes a lot of communicating and negotiating. I spend a
lot of time nodding my head and doing what they want, knowing the company is
going to have problems down the road,” she concedes. To help deal with those
power issues and issues of goal-setting and planning, Herrara advises
consultants to network, “talk to people who are now where you want to be five
years from now.” She also recommends joining consultant groups such as the
International Computer Consultant's Association.
Two personality traits are vital for success as an independent consultant,
according to Peter Meyer of The Meyer Group in Scotts Valley, Calif. “One trait
is the ability to work alone for a long time. Many of us are not good at working
on our own, and that argues against being a consultant. If we prefer people to
tasks, it is too hard to make the hard decision to fire a client. Happy
consultants tend to love the work more than the people contact.” According to
Meyer, “The second trait is being willing to put our idea of perfection in
second position behind what the client actually needs. This is a combination of
listening and understanding that a technical solution is only part of the
solution. For the technical solution to work, you need to solve other needs as
well. Sometimes the solution that is second best technically is far superior for
the client.” Like Holtz and Herrara, he urges would-be independent consultants
to “remember to put as much energy and skill into your marketing as the
technical work.”
Computer consultants often are pictured as cutting-edge experts who keep getting
work by staying ahead of corporations on the technology curve. Yet, most
companies do not immediately grab onto each change in technology. They try to
milk their hardware and software investments as long as they can. So there are
demands for consultants with “old” skills, as well as new ones, says John
Genzano of Genzano Software Consulting in West Chester, Pa. “Five years ago, the
consultants who concentrated on IBM mainframe COBOL were all asking us PC people
what they should learn so that they could continue to make a living,” Genzano
explains. “Today, because of the year 2000 problem, those same people are making
more money than they ever saw before, and usually more than the PC people they
were talking to five years ago.” Whether consulting is a good business or career
to pursue, “depends on who you are, andăif you have one who your spouse is. If
you and especially your spouse can handle the uncertainty of essentially looking
for a new job every six to nine months, then it will be a good business to go
into. If you hate the interview process, then keep your day job,” Genzano
recommends. Experience, according to Genzano is the main ingredient in
consulting success. Large and mid-sized companies hire consultants to bring
knowledge to the company that may not already be accessible to the onsite
employees. Small companies simply don't have the staff necessary to complete
their project and they need someone who can complete the job without a lot of
supervision. “So, while you can become a consultant fresh out of college by
going to work for a consulting firm, you need some experience before going out
on your own, ” Genzano adds.
Working for a consulting firm is a nice compromise for those who like variety
but don't like marketing themselves. Other benefits to working for a consulting
firm include insulation from legal issues, guaranteed pay whether contracted or
not and the standard health, vacation and 401K packages. According to Mark
Rossmann, a technical consultant with Analysts International Corporation (AiC)
of Minneapolis, Minn., the main benefit of consulting is the ability to work
with a variety of people and learn their businesses. “Consulting allows you the
change factor. Working for one company for a long period, you may get stuck
specializing in a small number of skills unique to that position,” he notes.
“This way I can keep learning new skills and this makes me more marketable. ”
Rossmann also likes the fact that working for a consulting firm insulates him
from some of the political problems inherent in corporate life. “I can leave
political problems at the doorstep of my contractor,” Rossmann says. “I have a
site manager who can mediate conflicts if necessary,” he adds.
Rossmann emphasizes that the biggest benefit of working for a consulting firm is
having someone else coordinate his placement. “I never have to look for work
this way. And, if I'm at a site and I want to move before my skills get stale,
AiC will start the ball rolling to replace me and find another position for me,”
he says. Finally, Rossmann says he gets compensated for overtime by his firm,
either through comp time or additional wages. Independent consultants often get
paid the same amount regardless of how many hours they work on a project.
If you do go into business for yourself, get to know a lawyer who works with
consultants, says Fredric M. Wilf , an attorney with the firm of Saul, Ewing,
Remick & Saul in Berwyn, Pa. “With independent computer consultants and
contractors, many issues come up over and over,” Wilf counsels. “For example,
when [consultants] write software, who owns the copyright? The consultant's
customer by default will have non- exclusive rights to use the software if there
is no written agreement to the contrary. But customers and users need to know
what rights they have in using the softwareăand they often do not.” Don't assume
the customer knows the copyright laws. If you do, Wilf cautions, you may end up
having your copyright infringed upon, and seeing your software being sold on the
Net.
Wilf emphasizes that consultants and their customers need to better learn the
law, so that the issue of who has what rights becomes a business decision
addressed beforehand, rather than a lawsuit afterwards. Copyright and liability
issues can hold hidden traps for unwary independent consultants. Wilf provides
an example, “Jane is an independent computer consultant. XYZ company needs a
database to run its company. Jane and XYZ orally agree that Jane will write the
software. Since there is no written agreement, the default is that Jane owns the
copyright in the software.
On the liability side, without a written agreement between the parties there may
be an implied warranty that Jane's software meets a minimum level of
merchantable quality, as well as an implied warranty that the software is fit
for a particular purpose. Thus, Jane may be bound to warranties of which she is
not aware, Wilf counsels.“In a written agreement, the parties can agree to limit
the consultant's liability, but there is no such limitation without a written
agreement,” Wilf warns. This is a particularly tricky problem for employees who
plan to start their own businesses. Any copyrightable material written while
employed at the company as work for hire may be owned by their current employer.
Most attorneys, therefore, will recommend written agreements so that the
consultant knows if and when he or she should fix something on the material they
have created.
Wilf further advises that all agreements noncompete, confidentiality and
nondisclosure should be reviewed by a knowledgeable attorney. The ability to
enforce an agreement differs from state to state, so a local attorney should
review the document. And not only employees, but employers should consult an
attorney in these areas, before they hire a consultant.