Hiring Business
Consultants for Your Business
More
and more companies are hiring business consultants to fill vacant positions or
to perform a specific task within the company. The right consultant can help
your company improve efficiency, use technology more wisely or help develop a program
or plan. The Better Business Bureau warns, hiring the
wrong consultant can harm your company by wasting time and money and alienating
employees.
The
key to picking the right consultant is to be certain that your company needs
one. Take the time to lay out the specifics of the problem you face, the exact
objective you want to accomplish and a time frame for doing so. Consider
whether your immediate "problem" is a symptom of a larger problem. By
carefully thinking things through, you may discover that you do not need an
outsider to identify the true problem. Maybe one of your employees has the
ability and the desire to do the job.
The
BBB suggests these tips to help find the consultant that is right for your
business:
- Ask people you trust for referrals to
qualified consulting firms or sole practitioners. Contact each referral
with a brief letter or phone call describing the problem you need to
solve, your industry conditions and your management style.
- Schedule an introductory meeting with
three or more of your best prospects. This will allow you the opportunity,
by asking pointed questions, to verify that the consultant has experience
with the specific problem and your industry.
- Check references thoroughly.
Reputable consultants should be able to provide references readily, while
would-be-consultants will have few, if any, to offer. Also check to see if
the consultant is accredited by a national association. Some associations
do extensive background checks and their members usually must be in business
for at least five years. They also hold members to professional codes of
conduct.
- Get a written proposal. Reliable
consultants will provide a written, detailed proposal before the contract
is signed. Without specifics you could end up losing valuable time and
money.
- Clearly spell out all fees.
Consultants can charge a fixed fee or an hourly rate. Hourly rates could
raise your costs substantially, so ask the consultant to put a ceiling on
the job to cap your expenses. Also beware of the consultant who asks for
all of the money up-front. It's customary to pay as much as one-third in
advance, with the rest due on specific dates or at the completion of the
project.
- Keep good records. For each
consultant you hire, establish a file, which should contain the consultant's contract, invoices, copies of 1099 forms and
any other information that shows the worker is operating an independent
business. This may include the consultant's business card and stationery.
This
report is general in nature and is not intended as a reliability report on any
company, service or product.