Thanks for all the supportive comments
The problem is that too many people have too small a war chest and a good number of agencies/companies are getting used to being able to impose hard terms on people who can't say "no" because of mounting bills. When they meet someone who just wants a fair deal then it doesn't work out and they blame the contractor.
When the market comes back round again to nearly full utilisation in the contract market then there are a few agencies/companies that are going to find filling contract roles very difficult. First against the wall will be those who screw contractors with this "employed consultant" business, then those like the parties involved in this thread, then the downright miserable penny-pinchers who think £200 a day is a "good" rate for a project manager with 15+ years of experience these days.
I also hope that when the market comes around again, more people will concentrate on building a 12+ month war chest rather than the few pounds stuffed away that most contractors have that I know. Too many people had large credit card debts, unsustainable mortgages and flashy cars in the "good" times but neglected to pad their savings accounts.
The problem is that too many people have too small a war chest and a good number of agencies/companies are getting used to being able to impose hard terms on people who can't say "no" because of mounting bills. When they meet someone who just wants a fair deal then it doesn't work out and they blame the contractor.
When the market comes back round again to nearly full utilisation in the contract market then there are a few agencies/companies that are going to find filling contract roles very difficult. First against the wall will be those who screw contractors with this "employed consultant" business, then those like the parties involved in this thread, then the downright miserable penny-pinchers who think £200 a day is a "good" rate for a project manager with 15+ years of experience these days.
I also hope that when the market comes around again, more people will concentrate on building a 12+ month war chest rather than the few pounds stuffed away that most contractors have that I know. Too many people had large credit card debts, unsustainable mortgages and flashy cars in the "good" times but neglected to pad their savings accounts.
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