Quote from Brandonf:
I've always wondered something about people who work for someone else..and it's this.
Why in the hell would you do it? Let me explain.
Why in the world are you trading your hard earned experience for only half of what you are worth (and probably much less).
Brandon
Some busineses are getting tougher to compete without some "scale." So, you are forced to ramp-up & take on employees or independent contractors, and have office & staff overhead. Some professions have extensive liability, so you have to be very careful about new hires & even that is no guarantee you won't get sued, which is very expensive, or perhaps sued and lose which is even worse.
If you don't ramp up, you get squeezed as larger "shops" have more extensive data bases, resources, support and synergies.
In my profession, independent contractors make appx 50% of fees & overhead is likely 25% to 30%. So, you are giving up 20% to 25% of what you make and for that the boss does mostly everything (except the work), including generating the WORK or ASSIGNMENTS & you have more extensive resources & support staff... BF, you have internut stuff going, you may not realize that sometimes very late at night when you have a software glitch or the copier won't work and you have a deadline in a few hours, it would be nice to be able to go to someone and say "hey, your copy machine is broken, call someone to fix it."
I'm still a 1-man band & I've been self-employed for like 25 years, so I'm probably unemployable for someone else. Remember, if you work for someone they can occasionally throw you a crappy job & you have to do it. As the "boss", I can still say NO when a client calls, which I did this past week.
I have a buddy who went to work for a national firm - he had 3 kids entering college (twins & a step-child) & he just couldn't risk almost $100,000/year in tuition/room/board on his own, so he bit the bullet & took a desk at a big "shop".
Its not as simplistic as you suggest.