Exectables
How it works
An engagement at Exectables follows a set order. It is written here in full, so a firm’s diligence and an exec’s expectations rest on the same page.
01
The brief
Describe the engagement in your own words — the outcome, the hours, the timeline, the budget, the delivery mode. The brief takes shape as you write, and nothing is sent until you say so.
02
Introductions, within 48 hours
Reece at Exectables personally introduces two or three execs from the bench, suited to what you described, within 48 hours. Each introduction names the exec, their relevant tenure, and their availability. If you wrote to one exec directly from their profile, that exec has 48 hours to accept or decline.
03
The rate
Rates are never published. An exec’s rate range is disclosed to you when they accept your brief — and the figure you see is the one recorded at their acceptance. A later change to their profile does not rewrite what you agreed.
04
The engagement
Each engagement carries its own message thread. The exec supplies the meeting link; times are proposed and agreed in the thread, and a calendar invitation goes to both diaries. Nothing is charged while the work is under way.
05
Completion
The exec marks the engagement complete and you confirm it — or, if you take no action, it confirms itself after 72 hours. The confirmation leads with the person: the exec’s completed work, by name, then the amount, then the action. Engagements up to $5,000 are charged to the card authorised at booking; larger engagements are invoiced through Stripe on completion, payable within ten days. A GST-compliant receipt follows either way.
06
The review
Reviews are private first. What you write is never published as a quote, and a public average appears on an exec’s profile only once at least three reviews exist. Below that threshold, nothing is shown at all.
What you will not find
No public rate card — a rate is a matter between you and the exec who accepts your brief. No star ratings by default — an average appears only above the three-review threshold. No urgency. The bench is not a marketplace.