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by pallandt
4715 days ago
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I would venture into guessing that the client wasn't told about this. If I was in a similar situation and I'd be told the company I'm paying to work on my project is outsourcing it, I'd think they're either a) they're too busy for me/I'm too small of a client for them, b) money is money so they're taking my project, but I shouldn't bet on spectacular results. Also, there'd be some broken trust involved. There would also be the risk of losing the client altogether the moment they hear you won't actually be working on their project, but someone else would be instead. |
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But so what? You talk to your client about a prospective engagement, then you build a "dream team" proposal that puts you on the hook for the performance of the whole project and makes you the single point of contact for all project matters, but then uses the specialized expertise of partner firms as a sales point. You sell with the subcontracting arrangement, not in spite of it. It's not something you sneak in under the wire.