Career Help and Advice
Related: About this forumI have a question re temp employment agencies
What happens if a person is hired as a temp (through an agency) and it turns out that the company
wants to hire the person full-time? I am certain that the temp agency will disallow this, as they make
their money being the intermediary, so-to-speak. I tried googling this but came up with nothing.
Thanks!
CurtEastPoint
(19,137 posts)Typically, the client has to pay the agency a (usually large) fee if they want to permanently hire an employee.
ailsagirl
(23,765 posts)So it's something between the employment agency and the employer. My employer said she didn't sign anything-- either she's wrong or else it's perhaps something I signed. Either way, it doesn't look good for me.
CurtEastPoint
(19,137 posts)The agency is your employer. The person at the client site (where you work) may not be aware of a contract but somewhere that language exists. It might be in what you signed. Don't get discouraged. Over the years I have worked temp and there were several opportunities offered. The hiring company (where you work) has to pay some sort of 'damages' or 'indemnity'. If it's a small company where you are working, it may be more informal. Good luck!
I just found this: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jacquelynsmith/2012/09/28/how-to-turn-your-temp-job-into-a-permanent-one/
ailsagirl
(23,765 posts)I appreciate your input, your good wishes, and the link!!
bikebloke
(5,262 posts)The temp agencies I worked for had an agreement that you had to work through them for a certain period of time before you could move over. For me, the trouble was that I worked for years with the same companies as a temp because they didn't want to pay up for benefits. It was a poverty trap. I'll never do that again.
ailsagirl
(23,765 posts)I'm amazed at how cheap so many companies are-- even ones rolling in dough!!
TexasBushwhacker
(20,646 posts)One way is the company pays a flat fee to the agency. I got a job this way and the fee was 25% of my annual salary.
The other way is to do a temp-to-perm arrangement where they pay the company a higher hourly rate than normal to spread the fee out over 90 days (typically).
mackerel
(4,412 posts)over the years but this time around I don't seem to be getting the nibbles.
ailsagirl
(23,765 posts)what the client pays the agency and the client doesn't know how much we (the temps) make.
If a temp makes, say, $15/hour, you can be sure the agency charges the client $45/hour.
At least, that's my understanding.
mackerel
(4,412 posts)45-55% of the hourly to what the employer pays. So if an employer is paying $19.20/hr for their temp then $12/hour is going to temp employee and $7.20/hr is the agency fee. A lot of the temp agencies are responsible for your work comp & other insurance. I only dealt with clerical/admin temps. This was just for the fee but when it was a temp to hire situation then you had to also do a buy-out and that depended on how long the employee had been temping for you.