Exectables
For retired senior investment-operations chiefs, on your terms.
Exectables is a private bench, not a marketplace. Exec members set the hours they are willing to be engaged, the kinds of firms they will work with, and the shape of the engagements they will accept. Payouts are compliant with the Australian superannuation fifteen-hour rule. The platform fee is six per cent of the engagement subtotal, capped at thirty dollars a booking, and it comes out before your payout — never added to the firm’s bill.
If a foundation exec has forwarded you a private onboarding link, open it directly; it carries your invitation.
What membership looks like
Upload your CV and we draft your profile; nothing is published until you confirm. You set a rate range that never appears publicly. Briefs that match your shape arrive by email, and you accept or decline each one. Stripe delivers funds to your nominated Australian bank account and handles the ATO reporting.
Introductions, not self-marketing
You are never asked to pitch for work. When a firm’s brief suits the shape you have set, it arrives by email and waits under My briefs — in its own time, on your terms. Introductions are made personally: two or three execs to a brief, within 48 hours, each named with their relevant tenure and availability.
Your rate stays yours
Your rate range is disclosed to a firm only when you accept their brief, and the figure they see is the one recorded at your acceptance — adjusting your range later does not rewrite an engagement already agreed. There is no public rate card, and there never will be one.
Built around the fifteen-hour rule
The bench is built for working in retirement, not a return to it. You set the hours you are willing to be engaged, engagements are scoped in hours rather than retainers, and payouts are compliant with the Australian superannuation fifteen-hour rule.
How you are paid
Nothing is charged to the firm until the engagement completes; your payout follows through Stripe to your nominated Australian bank account, with the platform fee — as set out above — taken out before it reaches you, never added to the firm’s bill. On short advisory engagements you may require a deposit of one hundred and fifty dollars, paid by the firm and forfeited to you in full if they do not show. The deposit is your protection, and the choice to require it is yours.