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IT Freelance Market in Belgium - Freelance Busi...

IT Freelance Market in Belgium - Freelance Business Month 2023

This slide deck explores the IT freelance market in Belgium. It covers key topics like where to focus on the IT market, the most in-demand programming languages, platforms for finding freelance jobs, and tips for succeeding as an IT freelancer. Created in collaboration with the Freelance Business Community, for Freelance Business Month (FBM) 2023, this presentation is a valuable resource for freelancers aiming to thrive in Belgium’s growing independent economy.

Wallace Espindola

September 23, 2024
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  1. • IT market movement and numbers • Advantages and disadvantages

    • Where are the opportunities • Business areas to target • Top technologies searched • Revenues and rates • Types of work/company • How to start • Tricks and threats Schedule
  2. Main learning takeaways 1) Discover the IT Freelance Market; 2)

    Step-by-step on how to start and how to succeed; 3) Where and how to focus on the IT market.
  3. DISCLAIMER All of these slides are based on personal experiences

    and opinions, IT colleagues experiences, and some statistics. Advice from an experienced local market accountant or lawyer is always recommended.
  4. About me • Brazilian from Rio de Janeiro • 17

    years of career in IT • Experiences in many industries: Government, Oil&Gas, Banking, Telecom, Defense, Education, BioTech. • In Belgium since 2017, 4 years as employee, 2 years as freelancer • Profile: SW development & architecture • Stack: Back-end / Java / Web
  5. Diversity of profiles for IT Developers Engineers Mathematicians Physics Administration

    Business Economy Professors Geeks English French Dutch …
  6. Business areas to target • Government (European Commission & local

    governments of Flanders and Wallonia) • Banks, Payments & Fintechs • Pharmaceutics & BioTech • Manufacturing / Industry • Automobilistic & Aviation • Telecom & Network • Services providers • IoT & Automation
  7. Accenture Adecco AlmavivA de Belgique Alten Belgium Amaris IS&D Artemis

    ARΗS Developments Atos Belgium Barco Capgemini Belgium Cegeka Groep CGI Belgium CRI Computer Resources Intl. Cronos International Dekimo European Dynamics Everis Belgium Fujitsu Technology G2 Recuiting Gazelle Global Gentis Tergos Thaleria TMC Trasys International Unisys Belgium Unisystems Vibe Group Vivid Sourcing Volt Westpole Xplore Group Harvey Nash IT Hays Huxley Indra Infosys Intrasoft IRIS Solutions Jefferson Frank Recruit Koda Staff NFI Nigel Frank Intl. NTT Data Belgique Oliver James OneSource Consulting Optimus Search Ordina Belgium Parallel Consulting Serco Belgium Sopra Steria Benelux Spilberg Recruitment Sword Technologies Synergie Belgium Teksystems Some frequent players contracting freelancers
  8. Rates in the Belgium market and around • Focus on

    mid to long term contracts • Business to business • Focus on projects • Participate in teams • Experienced profiles • Mid to senior preferred • Experts 300 €/day 800 €/day *The rates are normally defined per day of work (or rate per hour, 8hs)
  9. The rule of the game In fact: Revenue - business

    expenses = taxable base Then: Taxable base - taxes = profit Rule:
  10. Business expenses examples • Account and other services • Telecom

    and Energy bills • Devices that you need to work • Fuel and transportation/commuting costs • Company car, smartphone, laptop, devices • Office furniture and cleaning • Everything for your office needs • No VAT
  11. Employee x Freelancer/Contract EMPLOYEES • Monthly Salary • Pension contribution

    • Yearly vacation payment • Yearly end of year extra payment • Sick days covered • Meal vouchers • Optional: medical insurance, phone, company car, gym, etc… FREELANCERS • Monthly revenue in your company - and you decide your personal salary • Lower pension than employee • No • No • No • No • … • But you manage the budget of your company as you wish
  12. Freelancer: Independent x Company As INDEPENDENT • One man company

    • you and the company are the same entity • Single and simple direct taxation, but higher As a COMPANY • You are the manager / director • You may have employees or associates if you wish • You have normal taxation on your salary, and taxed dividends later on • Your company has taxation, after business expenses (including your salary)
  13. How the contracts look • Fixed term contracts or by

    assignment/project • 3, 6, or 12 months • Normally renewable • Rate per day or per hour • Payment every month • Payment terms: 7 to 30 days after monthly work • Average 1-2 days/week onsite, the rest home-office
  14. How much money to start and some initial costs •

    Around 3000 EUR to open company type SRL (limited liability) • Less money if company type is SComm (no notary) • Accountant from 150 to 300 EUR / month • Around 800 EUR for pension funds initially (per trimester) • For some contractors: First money in 60 days • For others: money 7 days after end of month (so ~37 days)
  15. Step by step to start 1. Talk to recruiters and

    contractors, find job, quit… 2. Contact a local accountant, get advice 3. Open a business bank account 4. Register VAT (type: independent, SRL, SComm, …) 5. Declare pension status as independent (not employee) 6. +/- 1 month to start operating
  16. How to evaluate yourself and your CV? ↑ Number of

    experiences + ↑ Number of Trainings/Courses + Certifications + Years of Experience
  17. Share your knowledge and be noticed • Participate in groups

    / communities • Contribute to Open Source Projects • Write technical articles to Blogs • Share knowledge on LinkedIn / Twitter • Presence in Meetups & Conferences • Answers questions in Stack Overflow • Trainings or courses given • Contribute on Github
  18. As smart Freelancer you should… (Tricks and Threats) • Find

    a local good and experienced accountant • Have a good mobile and internet connection subscription • Save in a pension plan or multiple ones • Have all necessary insurances and juridic assistance • Buy good and reliable equipment for your work • If you use it, have a good company car and fuel card • Or if it is your case, the public transportation subscriptions • Have all necessary gadgets that save you time (and money) • Pay all the productivity and security software licenses • Pay with your company all courses and training needed • Save for the taxes (yours and the company ones) • Avoid the immediate taxation, go long term and pay yourself a small salary (dividends 1st year 30% - 4th year 15%) • Benefit from intellectual property rights (copyrights) on what you produce (10-15%) (immediate lower taxation -> 7.5 to 15%)