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Agency ... or Network?

Topic: Home BusinessBy Lyn Prowse-BishopPublished Recently added

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If you’re a new virtual assistant you’ll want to take up the advice of the veterans and join a few networks. You get some great support, encouragement and advice particularly when starting out. Most networks will offer a discussion board, and for financial members a publicly-available listing on their website, and potentially access to job leads – which will go out to all on the list depending on how the network is set up. A few things, in my experience, networks should never do:
  • Ask you to assign ownership of your domain name/URL to them;
  • Have you sign a contract stating that you will pay them a percentage or fixed amount on any work you receive through the job lead;
  • Ask you to send invoices for work received as a result of job leads to the network owner for processing (who then takes the above commission before paying the VA);
  • Not have your membership details publicly listed in a directory for access by potential clients;
  • Include in their contract that any work you do that comes through the job leads is to be done in accordance with THEIR code of conduct;
  • Prevent you from engaging someone else to help with the work.
Let me elaborate on a couple of these points. If you receive work from a network via a job lead and you send your invoice to the network for processing via their CRM system you are no longer in control of the VA/client relationship. Your invoices should be between you and the client – not you and the network owner who then sends it on to the client. Whilst a code of conduct is important most VAs will have their own and should not be contracted to follow the code of conduct of the network. All VAs as independent contractors should be in charge of the way they handle their work including whether they seek assistance or can outsource the work to others. This is because you are an independent business owner. If you are prevented this freedom by the network then you’re not a member of a network but potentially an employee of the network. If the network you are part of does any of these things then you’re working for an agency. Job placement agencies and temping agencies operate in precisely this way – clients come to them, they find the temp to do the work, send them out, invoice the client and then pay the temp out of that. However, the temp is also in receipt of benefits including superannuation guarantee payments. Because for all intents and purposes the above arrangement makes them an employee of the agency – not an independent member of a network. If you’re a network owner – or if you use subcontractors to assist you in your VA practice – you also need to be careful because you could be facing untold financial problems if you operate according to any of the dot points listed above. It’s a grey area … and with the position taken towards independent contractors by the current Australian Labor government, a potentially costly one. ©Lyn Prowse-Bishop – www.execstress.com

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About the Author

Award-winning virtual assistant, Lyn Prowse-Bishop, MVA ASO CAVB PVAA is owner/manager of Executive Stress Office Support (eSOS), specialising in medico-legal digital transcription, virtual author support and executive personal assistant services for clients around the world. One of Queensland’s most respected and well known virtual assistants, Lyn is also founder of the Australian Virtual Business Network, serves as Australian representative on international committees looking at standards and certification for the VA industry, and is a foundation steering committee member of the annual Online International Virtual Assistants Convention. She hosts Australia’s first internet radio show/podcast for the VA industry – Virtual Business Show – and is Queensland representative on the Board of Independent Contractors Australia. How can you spend less time in the office and more enjoying life? Visit her site or email lyn@execstress.com to find out.

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