For those in the construction business finding one job while working on another can be quite impossible. There is simply not enough time to go out and solicit business. One option is to join a construction network. The purpose of a construction network is to match contractors with clients. The clients log on to the construction network, submit the work they need done, and the contractors registered with the network bid on the job. The benefits of joining construction network are numerous.
Save Money
On of the benefits of joining construction network is the money that is saved on job solicitation. The contractor does not have to advertise, or actively go out and sell their business to the public. Instead, simply contacting the network is all that needs to be done to find a job.
Save Time
Most contractors are too busy completing a job to go out and actively seek another job. Most times the contractor cannot seek a new job until the former one has been completed. This means a gap in time from one job to the next. By joining a construction network the contractor can find a new job while in the completion stages of the previous building assignment. This way there is no gap in time in between jobs.
Instant Reputation
Many construction networks will do their own background checks on your construction company to verify your reputation to their clients. As a contractor this means you do not have to spend valuable time collecting testimonials and documenting your work on websites and in advertisements. Your contracting network will verify your capabilities and excellent handiwork.
There are numerous benefits of joining construction network. All save the contractor time and money. In addition the networks vouch for the reputation of your business as they complete the background checks and collect testimonials and examples of the construction work.
Benefits Of Joining Military
If you are a non-union, unskilled, blue collar worker who dropped out of high school, but has good native intelligence (passes a very challenging aptitude test) and a good work ethic, the military pay and benefits are better than you can get on the outside. If you are a highly educated, technically skilled worker with some experience, the military doesn't even come close to paying what you are worth on the outside.
Most people do not fall in either extreme. There are also many other reasons to serve besides pay and benefits. And pay and benefits cannot make-up for the potential of major injury or loss of life, if you do not wish to give up some of your freedoms and offer your life for your country.
Every year the Army Times publishes a putative pay and benefits comparison for various jobs in the military, and their assumed civilian job equivalent. This might be a good article to look at for some insight to your question. Benefits are assumed at a high level, even if the military member never uses that benefit. Thus I am assumed to have a benefit advantage of being able to use military health care, the commissary, and the Post Exchange, to the tune of about $10,000 in savings a year (which the Army Times would add to my annual salary to inflate that number). However, I live too far away from a post to take advantage of these "benefits." The cost of gas to get to post would far outweigh any reduced price savings I would get. So my actual pay and benefits is lower than the "typical" pay an benefits the Army Times claims.
When I lived in DC my salary did not go nearly as far as it does when I live in the middle of nowhere Alabama. A young PFC working in the Pentagon will find it hard to make ends meet, but the civilian secretary doing a similar job, with locality pay, will make far more. That same PFC at Fort Benning Georgia can live very well. It is probably better than the local business secretaries.
However, I have to admit that when you are in the military, you do not get to choose where you will serve, or when you will go to war. You cannot leave the job just because you do not like the current boss's policies, like you can in a civilian job. There are significant intangible concerns that make the military the right job for some people and a very poor job for others, all pay and benefits consideration aside.
This was a rather general answer on this question. It will vary with a specific specialty and rank. If you go to http://www.dfas.mil/money/milpay/index.html you can click on current pay rates and see exactly how much each rank gets paid.
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