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Did a major project for a well known charity - real eye opener. Chuggers out on the streets begging for pennies are paying for senior managements BMWs. Programme director was the worst workplace bully I have ever encountered. Not nice.
Had a good experience at a charity. No contract problems, no IR35 concerns. Same as everywhere else - a mix of competent and incompetent people. There were some contractors there who specialise in the charity sector.
To be honest, not really much different from any corporation I've contracted at.
If you are going direct, make sure they're aware your rates are ex -VAT. A mistake I made, to my cost. Not all of them are registered - same could apply to any small business client I guess.
Charity didn't want to pay my rate for an urgent project using the "we are a charity" excuse, their chairwoman taking out £250k or so per year btw. Now 9 months later the project is still being advertised.
Charity didn't want to pay my rate for an urgent project using the "we are a charity" excuse, their chairwoman taking out £250k or so per year btw. Now 9 months later the project is still being advertised.
I got a slightly higher rate than normal for the area when I did it.
The business organisation side was made up of lots of ex-corporate staff who had apparently taken pay cuts to work there. That's their choice I guess, and good on them. I would have been prepared to negotiate on my rate a little but was never asked - they just accepted my initial statement.
The level of pay in the charity sector isn't particularly appealing. Having worked in three different charities as a permanent or fixed-term employee, I still get calls/emails these days about permanent or contract work in the sector and the level of pay is often only 50%-60% of what I currently earn.
Some people who haven't worked in charities might be tempted to take a pay-cut to 'do a good deed' by working in a charity, but I certainly wouldn't do that after seeing how a few charities were run and behaved. I think I'd only consider that sector again if I was out of work and desperate.
The level of pay in the charity sector isn't particularly appealing. Having worked in three different charities as a permanent or fixed-term employee, I still get calls/emails these days about permanent or contract work in the sector and the level of pay is often only 50%-60% of what I currently earn.
Some people who haven't worked in charities might be tempted to take a pay-cut to 'do a good deed' by working in a charity, but I certainly wouldn't do that after seeing how a few charities were run and behaved. I think I'd only consider that sector again if I was out of work and desperate.
Where's your 'compassion'? You're talking down Tony Blair's 3rd sector here.
I hear Common Purpose is a good charity gig
"Progressiveness is the blind and fear-filled worship of dead socialists such as Joseph Stalin, Leon Trotsky, Vladimir Lenin and Adolf Hitler."
Charity didn't want to pay my rate for an urgent project using the "we are a charity" excuse, their chairwoman taking out £250k or so per year btw. Now 9 months later the project is still being advertised.
I got that once or twice with local council gigs. My reply is that my rate pays for my charity - mine and kids holiday!
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