I've never understood the statement that temps are less expensive and more cost-effective.
Yes, you don't have to give them PTO or benefits. Yes, you don't have to pay unemployment taxes or social security for them. But someone DOES. And ALL companies are in business TO MAKE A PROFIT. So, if a consulting company is paying someone to do a temp job for you, they're paying that person a reasonable wage that's in the same ballpark as the employees. They're giving them PTO or paying them a higher wage so that they can afford to take time off or get them through the gaps between temp gigs. They're offering that person benefits even though the employee is paying 100% of the costs. They're paying the unemployment taxes and social security taxes. AND they're making a profit, so that means in total dollars, Cisco and other companies are paying more per hour for that person's work than if they were employees.
But, because of accounting and dividing things into various categories, it's considered less of a liability to hire a temp than an employee. I get the flexibility of temps, where you can let them go "just because" instead of having to justify firing, but that flexibility comes with costs. Those costs are a higher cost / man-hour and less efficiency. With the constant churn of temps, you have to get a computer, a network account, an email account, access to various systems & tools, and get the temp up to speed on how/where to find documentation on processes and procedures. And then you have to revoke all those accounts/accesses once they leave and turn in the computer. How many man-hours are wasted on that, especially when all the temps you bring in all do basically the same job. Why not just have an employee do that work instead of a constant churn of temps?
The way that Cisco has been going though document repositories over the past 5 yrs, good luck keeping things documented so the new guy can hit the ground running as they say. Those little details that you only mess with once every 3-5 yrs as you upgrade systems can easily get lost when the documents move from Cisco wiki to WebEx Social to Confluence wiki to whatever is next. But that employee you let go who'd gone through several upgrades remembers that there's a few little "gotcha's" that get overlooked and goes searching for the old documents in his/her email. Too bad that email's now gone, along with all the notes on his/her laptop.
Bumped from @OmkzWaI-1vwc for visibility.