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by jokethrowaway
906 days ago
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I don't think the problem for tech people is in thinking it's too hard. I think it's trading working on what they like vs doing admin / sales / marketing. That said, I wish everybody were a contractor and employees wouldn't exist.
(Good) Contractors are accountable exactly to what they are paid for (no more and no less).
Employees are accountable to drinking coffee and it's a damn pain working around them to try to get something done. The only exception is people with equities working in startups and dreaming big. |
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That's certainly one of many good reasons not to run your own consulting business. That said, it's entirely possible to hire/outsource support to do much, if not all, of the admin/sales/marketing work.
> (Good) Contractors are accountable exactly to what they are paid for (no more and no less). Employees are accountable to drinking coffee and it's a damn pain working around them to try to get something done.
In my experience, productivity tends to depend more on the "good", than on the contractor/employee dimension, and a non-trivial part of the "good" stems from how well they are being managed by the business... which yeah, a huge part of being good at managing either contractors or employees is about accountability. Sometimes you get better employees or contractors than you deserve, and that can imbue the contractor/employee characteristic with more causal significance than it deserves, but by and large, you don't.