What is the difference between an MSA and a contract ?
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What is the difference between an MSA and a contract ?
Would you take a pay cut from $205K base to $180K base to go fully remote + can live wherever (from 2 days in office in NYC).
My net worth is 343k as a 26 year old. Why do i still feel behind? Current salary is 140k. Friends in tech have been making 190k-350k from college up until now.
What net worth would you need to feel comfortable walking away from corporate for good
I was just terminated from the deals group. I’ve let myself go in terms of my health and weight. I figured I’d use a good chunk of the severance time to get in shape over the summer and focus on my health but my friends and family are pushing me to find a way to juggle both and call me crazy for taking my time. My plan is to build a morning routine of fitness and work that into my new schedule when I’m rehired. Any thoughts ?
How do you respond when at Partner starts yelling at you/your team? How do you respond?
MSA is the overarching agreement between you and the client. Within that agreement you will usually have many contracts/SOWs for that client but all of these will fall under the requirements set forth in the MSA.
if by MSA you mean master services agreement. Then MSA is a type of contract. Not all contracts are MSA’s
Ok the MSA will cover all types of services i guess ? Tech, advisory, cloud ,consulting. And the MSA would have a std rate card which covers all these services for different job grades ? Then is a contract tied to a specific project ? And does it draw the consulting rates from the MSA ?
Your close but the words you are using are off. An MSA is a contract, it’s the overarching agreement that usual defines things like limits of liability, warranty, rates, and etc. A statement of work, a SOW, is generally the child of a MSA and is a contact that is specific to a project and defines things like scope, timelines, and fees
Parent child relationship
An agreement is a mutual understanding between the parties about their relative rights and responsibilities. Contracts are defined as an agreement between parties that creates enforceable obligations.
The best way to understand it is look at a SOW with and without an MSA - an MSA has all the overarching requirements/declarations/etc, and then if you have an MSA your SOW is just focused on the deliverables. No MSA, all that "other stuff" is in the SOW.