--- "Lynch, Jonathan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I just read a few articles on this... > > How do you guys who make your living as freelance > programmers deal with > this problem? If a company in a third world country > can charge a sixth > of the price that a company in a developed country > can charge - then how > do you guys ever manage to find clients? > > I can see how it would work if the required > programming also requires > on-site work - but I cannot see how it would work > outside of that. > > Just wondering, > > Jonathan >
Ho Jonathan, My consulting services happen outside of a regular (and demanding) dayjob, so I'm in a different position. However, at one of my previous jobs, I worked as a Functional Analyst, interacting with customers and looking at their needs from a functional oint of view, with development being done by a team at Origin India. While these people had good programming skills, the cultural differences and their apparant inability to grasp the finer points of custom procedures in accounting, order processing and production management applications, created serious problems. On the other hand, they saved the company at a time when an entire team had walked out and it couldn't find enough qualified developers to serve all customers who needed Y2K and euro-upgrades. In my opinion, there are projects for which outsourcing works, and there are projects for which it is the wrong choice -- and communication is the key. Jan Schenkel. ===== Quartam - Tools for Revolution <http://www.quartam.com> ===== "As we grow older, we grow both wiser and more foolish at the same time." (La Rochefoucauld) __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail - Easier than ever with enhanced search. Learn more. http://info.mail.yahoo.com/mail_250 _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
