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MAKING SUCCESS STORIES HAPPEN

 

FreelanceRecruitment Agency
for Companies in Belgium

The labour market is evolving rapidly. Belgian companies are facing growing needs for highly specialised expertise, temporary reinforcement and greater organisational flexibility.

Morgan Philips Freelance, is a freelance recruitment agency in Belgium, giving companies access to a large network of qualified independent professionals who are available quickly and rigorously selected.

Our mission: to help you hire freelance experts in Belgium at the right time, with the right level of expertise, under a secure contractual framework.

Key figures of the Freelancing market in Belgium

+92%
+58%
93%
1M

Why choose Morgan Philips as your Freelance Recruitment Agency in Belgium?

01.

A large network of freelance experts across Belgium

We have built a strong network of freelance experts in Belgium, covering Brussels, Flanders and Wallonia across multiple industries.

Our database is structured by:

  • Area of expertise
  • Level of experience
  • Availability
  • Location
  • Daily rate range

Result: a targeted and relevant selection of freelance experts in Belgium, fully aligned with your business challenges.

03.

A unique sourcing methodology

Our sourcing strategy combines:

  • A specialised CV database organised by expertise
  • Qualified professional networks
  • A dedicated research centre for direct talent headhunting

As a specialised freelance recruitment agency in Belgium, we go beyond traditional platforms and identify high-level professionals who are often invisible on standard job boards.

02.

Sector expertise and tailored support

Morgan Philips is an internationally recognised recruitment group. Through our freelance staffing solutions in Belgium, we bring this expertise to the world of independent professionals.

We understand:

  • Your operational constraints
  • Your budget considerations
  • Your deadlines
  • The key competencies required

Whether you need short-term support or long-term freelance contract recruitment, we act as a strategic partner.

04.

Responsiveness, proximity and reliability

Freelancing requires speed and flexibility.

We commit to:

  • Accurately understanding your needs
  • Presenting qualified profiles within days
  • Securing the contractual framework
  • Providing continuous follow-up throughout the mission

Our team works closely with your HR and operational stakeholders to ensure seamless contract staffing solutions in Belgium.

OUR TEAM

Our team specialised in Freelance Recruitment in Belgium

Morgan Philips Freelance relies on experienced consultants, each specialised in their respective industry. Each consultant:

  • Has in-depth sector expertise
  • Understands the Belgian market dynamics
  • Masters the specificities of contract recruitment in Belgium
  • Builds long-term partnerships with clients

 

Our team supports companies looking to hire freelance consultants in Belgium in the following sectors:

 

Our freelance staffing process in Belgium

At Morgan Philips Freelance, every assignment is structured to ensure speed, precision and security. Our freelance staffing methodology in Belgium is built around 8 key steps.

Frequently asked questions

Why work with a freelance recruitment agency instead of searching directly?

Partnering with a Freelance recruitment agency Belgium like Morgan Philips means accessing:

  • A curated network of freelance experts Belgium, available quickly
  • Proven expertise in sourcing across IT, finance, insurance, digital and marketing
  • Reduced hiring risks
  • Time savings for your internal teams
  • Flexible contract staffing solutions in Belgium adapted to your needs
  • Structured follow-up from start to finish

Our tailored approach allows you to hire freelance experts in Belgium confidently while maintaining full control over your project.

How long does it take to hire freelance consultants in Belgium?

Depending on the complexity of the profile, we typically present qualified candidates within a few days.

What is the difference between freelance and temporary work?

The difference between freelance and temporary work in Belgium mainly lies in the employment status and contractual relationship.

A freelancer is self-employed. They operate under an independent status (as a sole trader or through a company) and invoice their services directly to the client company. They are autonomous in how they organize their work and are not considered employees.

A temporary worker (interim) is an employee. They sign an employment contract with a temporary work agency, which assigns them to a client company for a fixed period. They benefit from employee social security protection.

How does a freelance contract work in Belgium?

A freelance contract in Belgium is a service agreement concluded between a company and a self-employed professional.

It typically defines:

  • The scope of the assignment
  • The duration (fixed-term or open-ended)
  • The daily rate (day rate) or hourly rate
  • Invoicing terms
  • Termination conditions
  • Confidentiality and non-compete clauses

Unlike an employment contract, a freelance agreement does not create a relationship of subordination. The freelancer remains autonomous in the execution of the assignment.

What are the fees of a freelance agency in Belgium?

The fees of a freelance agency in Belgium vary depending on the type of assignment, its duration, and the level of expertise required.

Generally, freelance agencies operate under two main models:

  • Margin included in the daily rate : The agency adds a commission to the freelancer’s day rate. The company pays a global rate without administrative complexity.
  • Fixed fees or a percentage of the daily rate: The commission usually ranges between 10% and 25% of the daily rate, depending on the level of support provided (sourcing, screening, contracting, follow-up).

Are you looking for a new freelance assignment?

Hire freelance consultants in Belgium

Companies, are you looking to hire freelance experts in Belgium?

Send us your mission brief.

Morgan Philips Freelance delivers tailored solutions through our extensive Belgian and international network of professionals.

Freelancers, are you looking for your next mission?

Send us your CV and join the Morgan Philips Freelance network.

We connect independent professionals with qualified opportunities across Belgium and internationally, supporting both short-term projects and long-term collaborations aligned with your ambitions.

Candidates, if you are looking for a job, send us your CV by completing the submit CV form.

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AI Literacy for HR: The Compliance Clock Is Ticking—Will Your Workforce Be Ready?
MPG Spain
/ Categories: en

AI Literacy for HR: The Compliance Clock Is Ticking—Will Your Workforce Be Ready?

 

Shadow AI Is Already Inside Your Company (and Article 4 Makes It HR-Relevant) 

The session opened with a simple—but unsettling—story: an employee uses ChatGPT to draft customer proposals in minutes rather than hours. Productivity soars. But the account is private, data travels outside the organization, and confidential details (names, pricing, contract language) can inadvertently become part of external model training. The real sting: this isn’t hypothetical. It’s happening now. 

The keynote speaker Joachim Riegel framed the reality HR leaders must face: many companies believe they “don’t use AI” because no tool has been officially approved. Yet employees are using it anyway—a phenomenon now widely described as shadow AI. In the webinar, a striking statistic was cited: in 42% of German companies, at least one employee uses AI daily without anyone knowing.

This is where the urgency sharpens. Under Article 4 of the EU AI Act (in force since 25 February), the question is not “Did you approve AI?” but “Are your people using AI in a business context—and do they know how to use it safely?” A written prohibition that nobody controls is not a shield. If an untrained user triggers harm—think data leaks or poor decisions—liability sits with the company, and in severe cases, leadership exposure can escalate. 

The core insight for HR: AI risk is often a learning gap, not malicious intent. Employees typically want to do a good job; they simply lack a clear framework. That makes AI literacy a classic HR mandate: define expected behaviours, create learning pathways, and embed responsibility into daily work—before an incident forces the organization to learn the hard way. 

AI Literacy Is Not Tool Training: It’s Judgment, Governance, and a Living Learning System 

A standout learning point was the distinction between using AI and being literate in AI. Tool tutorials, prompt tips, and one-off video trainings may improve output—but they don’t meet the real organizational need. AI literacy, as presented, has three practical layers: 

  1. Understand the fundamentals (beyond tools) 
    HR doesn’t need data scientists—but it must cultivate baseline competence: what generative AI is, how LLMs work, what hallucinations and bias look like, and how to interpret risk categories. People who understand these can judge; people who only “operate” tools cannot. 

  1. Act responsibly (role-level clarity) 
    The webinar emphasized the everyday questions that prevent incidents: Which data can go into which system? Why are some tools allowed and others not? What does “human-in-the-loop” mean at my desk? This is governance translated into behaviour—where policy becomes practice. 

  1. Stay current (because AI changes faster than your training cycle) 
    AI evolves at a pace that breaks traditional L&D rhythms. The session offered a vivid example HR leaders should not ignore: prompt injection in recruitment—hidden instructions inside a CV (e.g., white text on white background) that manipulates an AI screening system into rating a candidate as “excellent.” No hacking required—just a text editor and a clever trick. The message: if HR isn’t actively tracking new patterns of misuse, it will be surprised; if it is, it can design safeguards. 

To make AI literacy sustainable (and audit-proof), we propose three implementable steps: 

  • Quarterly, role-specific training tied to real work and real risk 

  • Peer exchange formats where teams share what worked, what failed, and what changed 

  • AI champions in each department—not as hype-driven fans, but as critical observers who translate new developments into local implications 

Finally, the webinar dismantled the “silo reflex.” AI cannot be owned by one function: IT provides secure tools, Legal covers frameworks and GDPR alignment, HR builds literacy and behavior change, and leadership sets tone and accountability. Even a secure environment like Copilot does not prevent wrong decisions made from AI output—literacy does.

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Content typeArticles
Topic
  • New world of work
  • HR & market trends
EN FAQ Question #1Isn’t AI literacy a responsibility of the legal department?
EN FAQ Answer #1

It’s cross-functional: Legal, IT, HR and leaders must act together—no in silos. 

EN FAQ Question #2Is August 2026 really a hard deadline for businesses, or can we stay calm?
EN FAQ Answer #2

Enforcement is approaching across Europe; waiting increases your risk and urgency is rising. 

EN FAQ Question #3What happens if an untrained employee causes a data leak?
EN FAQ Answer #3

The company can face serious consequences—training and governance are essential. In some cases, CFO or CEO are personally liable for the leaks if no specific training has been offered internally. 

EN FAQ Question #4How can HR stay up to date when AI changes weekly?
EN FAQ Answer #4

Build a rhythm: weekly curated sources + quarterly training + internal peer exchange.

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