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mechanical pogettista - free profession

  • Thread starter Thread starter Sampei80
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Sampei80

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Hello everyone,

I know that the subject has been discussed several times, but I wanted to ask those who have already made the jump from employee to freelancer who difficulty found, and possibly as he has overcome them.
I'm basically trying to figure out if it's worth it....
 
Hello everyone,

I know that the subject has been discussed several times, but I wanted to ask those who have already made the jump from employee to freelancer who difficulty found, and possibly as he has overcome them.
I'm basically trying to figure out if it's worth it....
that you must invoice per month at least 2-3 times what you take now as an employee to have the same revenue, considering taxes and management costs
Besides you have no vacation and disease, you will leave without a customer portfolio, which is now not easy to create, the profession is now deeply devalued so basically you will have to take away customers to someone else by practicing lower rates (and current ones are already at the limit)
according to my personal opinion today as today and in Italy it does not suit. . .
 
I'm 30 and I've been doing it for two now. I have the luck of a relative who put me in the circle of some customers.. but I do design plants (hot mechanics) and not machines.
in my case I can assure you that the problem is not so much gain (say I gain almost 3 times more than when I was doing the employee until 28 years) but the pressure you have on.
no one will ever tell you good but they will see only the negative sides (almost always though you know you have done a good job)...and in front you see the void in the sense that you do not see the "stabilities" of a company. Sometimes I think about getting back to being an employee. .
I'm lucky I still pay 4% in practice.
 
I'm 30 and I've been doing it for two now. I have the luck of a relative who put me in the circle of some customers.. but I do design plants (hot mechanics) and not machines.
in my case I can assure you that the problem is not so much gain (say I gain almost 3 times more than when I was doing the employee until 28 years) but the pressure you have on.
no one will ever tell you good but they will see only the negative sides (almost always though you know you have done a good job)...and in front you see the void in the sense that you do not see the "stabilities" of a company. Sometimes I think about getting back to being an employee. .
I'm lucky I still pay 4% in practice.
Well, congratulations, you're in the flattering, I guess, but you don't pay inps?
I do not know you, but the greatest difficulty is that 3 times out of 4 the customer claims that the work is done at his home. .
 
I do not know you, but the greatest difficulty is that 3 times out of 4 the customer claims that the work is done at his home. .
First, if I were you, I would be flexible and I would definitely accept, even because you would have a way to link professional relationships with internal staff, who will be able to assess your skills and propose you for subsequent activities.
 
in an analogous discussion always open to you
 
Well, congratulations, you're in the flattering, I guess, but you don't pay inps?
I do not know you, but the greatest difficulty is that 3 times out of 4 the customer claims that the work is done at his home. .
but this year with the incentives they give on the plants will end that supero (and I still don't know if it is good or bad:) then obviously I pay in arch. .
I can tell you that I don't know the professional free sector in cold mechanics and machinery but in energy plants work from where you want except work management and I think it's a easier sector because customers are potentially many more.. residences, companies, offices etc. Then obviously at the technical level I would not exchange it with an industrial robot but if you are at a stage where you think more about managing your times, earn more etc... now for the next 3 years at least of plants will need to do many (the engineers are missing). It depends on your needs and what type you are. do not underestimate the pressure-stress factor etc. that the free profession entails..poi maybe you happen the year you make a 15 thousand euro plant of parcel in a week (of these times happens) but it is not always so.
 
Hello everyone,

I know that the subject has been discussed several times, but I wanted to ask those who have already made the jump from employee to freelancer who difficulty found, and possibly as he has overcome them.
I'm basically trying to figure out if it's worth it....
I'm free professional, I've noticed that years ago you wrote to put yourself on p.iva and I assume you didn't. I understand that it's not easy, but it depends on where you live, I sit in the Bolognese in the packaging valley and the jump I made without thinking too many times. after 2 years I gained much more than when I was an employee.
I've been at home with covid for two weeks. I don't have any sickness, but for what I've done in these two years, I can afford it without problems.

but when you work for yourself, you will see that you don't want to think about the disease for a cough, the holidays during the year as well as in August.... on the contrary more work more billy and the more you want to give the maximum and do the extras. who thinks of those things must be an employee to life!

If you live in areas where work is not missing, you will see that your customers will always try to hire you with the undetermined, or recruiters will propose you undetermined positions so the way back will always be there.
If you live in poor areas of industries, then think about it well... .
 

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