Is it cheaper to outsource production than to hire full-time?
For variable workload, usually yes, because you pay for capacity when you use it instead of carrying a fixed cost through lean phases. A full-time hire costs 1.25 to 1.4x base compensation year-round, whether the current pipeline justifies it or not.
What architecture work is safe to offload without losing quality?
High-volume, standard-driven production: permit and CD sets, redline incorporation, model coordination, documentation, and visualization. Design decisions, client relationships, and code sign-off stay with your in-house licensed staff.
How fast can flexible production capacity start compared to hiring?
A full-time hire takes 45 to 60 days to recruit plus 4 to 8 weeks of ramp. A pre-vetted nearshore contractor working in your time zone and tools can join an active project in days rather than months, which is what makes it useful during a surge.
Won't a remote team slow us down on deadlines?
It depends on the time zone. An offshore team 10 to 12 hours ahead introduces overnight turnaround on every question. A nearshore team working your hours answers and revises the same day, which is why it fits deadline-driven production better despite a higher hourly rate.
Do we lose control of our standards by not hiring in-house?
Not if the model uses dedicated talent that stays assigned to your firm and onboards to your standards once, the way any team member would. The risk of drifting standards is highest with rotating freelancers or offshore staff who relearn your setup on every project.