dkbkk Posted March 15, 2011 Share Posted March 15, 2011 I am looking into starting an IT consultancy company in Thailand, and are looking for the price level of these services offered to customers. What is the normal rate that IT consultants charge companys per hour. The work field is to offer knowledge on infrastructure; Network, security, servers, virtualization, etc. And to small and mid-sized companies. Looking forward to answers :-) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dkbkk Posted March 19, 2011 Author Share Posted March 19, 2011 Nobody in the IT consultant industry in this forum? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tatsujin Posted March 19, 2011 Share Posted March 19, 2011 Do you want to what Thai's charge or what Farang charge? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
innerspace Posted April 8, 2011 Share Posted April 8, 2011 From the state of most IT systems in Thailand I can only assume that if any companies do hire consultants, they are most likely paying bananas to monkeys. Also hourly rates are not all that common here. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SweRob Posted May 9, 2011 Share Posted May 9, 2011 Can a Farang work as a IT Consultant in Thailand to begin with? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gtm2k Posted May 12, 2011 Share Posted May 12, 2011 Hi ! I run an IT Consulting business here, but mostly on the software side. Do very little of hardware / networking. However, being part of the ecosystem here's what I can tell you - Any consulting work here is mostly costed by project, not by the hours delivered. At the moment, certain implementations get paid by man-days delivered, but again - the clients expect the man-hours put in for each man-day to be flexible / as the job demands. There is plenty opportunity in the area of infra / nw-solutions / security /servers - but the real challenge is to develop , retain & maintain a good support team as this job is so support intensive. As long as you can sustain a small sales team of 2-3 guys giving you fresh leads, and a "skilled" team of network engineers - you'll do just fine. Do not depend on freshers for this - as most of the IT degrees dont touch too deeply on data communications subjects. Or, I have never come across a single candidate who had his basics right in this area. Presently, i do address certain clients with their networking / infra needs - and depend on third parties to do this for me. At the end of the day - I think you should consider doing this as a registered business, or a partner to another business rather than trying to market yourself as a consultant. Remember - Thai's dont pay for consulting ! Cheers, Gautam Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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