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Tabitha Funk
GVA
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PO Box 56
American Falls Idaho
83211
Phone: 208-220-2575
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How Much You Save by Using a Virtual Assistant
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VAs
vs. Employees
Virtual assistants' services run on average about
$25-$40+ an hour. Let's compare this with the cost
of hiring an employee. An employee's actual cost is
2 to 2 1/2 times their salary. Let's factor in some
of the inevitable expenses that come with hiring an
employee.
- Health/Dental/Vision Benefits
- Equipment and Space
- Supplies
- Retirement Plans
- Insurance
- Unemployment
- TAXES (VAs are self-employed and pay their own taxes.)
- Overtime Payment
- Someone to administer and oversee all of the above.
If you calculate the cost of all of the above, plus
the actual salary, you can see how expensive it is
to hire an employee. Let's see this put to work.
Here is a case example of hiring an employee to manage
a certain chore vs. hiring an experienced VA charging
$25 an hour.
The Employee
Hourly Pay Rate: $12.00
Fringe Benefits @ 35% +4.20
Overhead Rate @ 50% +6.00
Total Effective Pay Rate: $22.20
Hours per year x2,080
Total Annual Labor Cost $46,176.00
In the case of the employee, this new employee is paid
a wage of $12 an hour. However, this wage is not the true
cost to the organization. The cost of benefits for the
employee (health insurance, life insurance, 401k, and
so on) weighs in at 35 percent of the hourly wage, or
$4.20. Overhead---electricity, facilities, computers and
so forth---costs the organization another 50% of the employee's
wage or $6.00 for each hour worked and paid. This brings
the employee's total cost to the organization to $22.20
an hour--almost double the wage paid to the employee for
each hour worked. When you multiply the hourly rate by
the standard number of hours in a work year, the grand
total for the new employee comes to a very costly $46,176.00.
The Virtual Assistant
Hourly Pay Rate $25.00
Total Effective Pay Rate $25.00
Hours per year x1040
Total Annual Cost $26,000
You actually save almost $20,000 a year by contracting
with a VA rather than hiring a full-time employee. Although,
the VAs hourly rate is more than the new employee's
rate in the first case, you save the cost of benefits
and overhead that would have to be applied to the new
employee's wage. Not only that, but because VAs are
more experienced, more efficient, and better connected
than the employee, you'll need to devote far less time
to the project to get the same results---only 1,040
hours a year versus 2,080 for the new employee.
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Simply
Put
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Only
Pay for Time on Task
Your
employee's 8 hour day can be crunched into 3-4 hours
with a VA.
Simply put, you should contract with a VA because it
is more cost-effective and VAs go far beyond the normal
assistant's duties to deeply impact your own productivity.
No task is too big or too small for a VA to handle.
Even if you have only 1 hour of work a month for a VA
to do, a VA can (and will) do it. VAs let you focus
on the things that are most important to you; the business
aspect, while VAs handle the paperwork and planning
- the other duties that can eat away at your time and
productivity.
This example is adapted from/can be found in the
book, Consulting for Dummies.
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Web Update |
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01/03/06 - We Lost a Great VA Leader and Friend
Janet Jordan. She will be greatly missed.
05/01/05
- Just finished a new website for local realtor Joyce
Monday, Click
Here to take a look at it.
08/13/04 - New website design. More user friendly, faster loading, and easier navigation.
09/01/04 - Coming Soon! VAU Graduation.
07/13/04 - Imprev Training completed.
07/10/04 - Guru.net Training Completed.
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View
our PowerPoint
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