Originally posted by Peoplesoft bloke
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State of the Market
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Originally posted by dx4100 View PostMake room one more for the bench
After getting agreement with the directors my extension would be outside IR35 and thinking life’s good - tech lead leaves and is replaced with someone who is only going to destroy my mental health and probably get the ir35 agreement reversed to boot - so declined the extension and now I’m on a countdown to leave⭐️ Gold Star ContractorComment
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View Post1099 is just an IRS income tax return form, so that doesn't mean much to me. To clarify, there are avenues to earn income in the US without employment, but there is nothing analogous to the massive scale and broad scope of the UK contracting scene in the US. There are several historical reasons for this, one being the different labour markets (much easier to hire/fire in the US than the UK), another being the strict definition of what constitutes an independent contractor in the US (previously the "twenty factor test" - now see https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p15a.pdf - plus a bunch of state-specific tests that can be even tougher), another being the absence of large differences in taxation that you see in the UK (at least until recent years). There are probably others too.
There is a market for independent consultants but it is niche and much smaller than the UK. The majority of my US contracts (most of my work is outside of IT these days) come from my contact network and I have to negotiate the work order terms with each.Comment
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Originally posted by cosmic View PostI'm in cloud computing (azure and 365) I program using c#, JavaScript, reactJS. Background is in SharePoint since 2003.
Most roles are around dynamics 365 which is quite healthy but don't have the skill. Thinking to go perm into dynamics then contract again so I would have full 365 and azure.
However, having said that, I have a feeling Microsoft are no longer the biggest player in the IT market. They have been pretty much been taken over by Amazon (AWS) and Google (GCP). So i'm sorry to say. Microsoft tech are pretty much limited to big enterprises these days so you probably limited to those kind of roles.Comment
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Originally posted by hairymouse View PostWhat's the difference between Dynamics 365 and 365? Just curious.
I'd have thought that Azure, C# and JavaScript are very hot skills right now. I see tons of ads for those every day, so many that I thought getting certified in Azure would be my ticket off the bench. Am I completely mistaken?
I share same believe that Azure, C#, and JavaScript are very hot skills right now. Regardless of whether certs are worthwhile, the industry trend is heading towards Cloud in IT. so knowing Azure would be very handy indeed.Comment
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Originally posted by dx4100 View PostMake room one more for the bench
After getting agreement with the directors my extension would be outside IR35 and thinking life’s good - tech lead leaves and is replaced with someone who is only going to destroy my mental health and probably get the ir35 agreement reversed to boot - so declined the extension and now I’m on a countdown to leave
But probably wasting my words anyway, most of them understand only tempie and tax advantage.
Life is not only about work anyway and sometimes it takes us too long to understand that.Comment
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Originally posted by hairymouse View PostWhat's the difference between Dynamics 365 and 365? Just curious.
I'd have thought that Azure, C# and JavaScript are very hot skills right now. I see tons of ads for those every day, so many that I thought getting certified in Azure would be my ticket off the bench. Am I completely mistaken?
In my line of field as a developer it's getting harder and harder. Clients want everything under the sun with azure plus 365 stuff. Yes there are roles out for azure but actually landing an interview is next to none due to cheap foreign labour or client axing contract before it starts which is common due to costs involved.
Some contracts but not paying anywhere near to cover costs and most are within ir35 at around 250pd. Just not feesable.
Before ir35 trash it was ok and getting plenty of calls but last 4 months it's been quiet. Job ads about but most are fishing or don't hear back.Comment
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Originally posted by BritishLad88 View PostYeah, i'm curious to know what the difference is, I'd assumed he meant the same thing but used interchangeability? Or perhaps he was referring to Office 365?
I share same believe that Azure, C#, and JavaScript are very hot skills right now. Regardless of whether certs are worthwhile, the industry trend is heading towards Cloud in IT. so knowing Azure would be very handy indeed.
Vanilla reactJS with vanilla JavaScript and nodeJS is the tech but recruitment agents can't get past azure and 365. If you get what I mean? Confusing I know!
If you do vanilla stuff and within last two roles you are fine and some jobs about but if it's mixed in with 365 and SharePoint It kinda gets lost in translation lol and recritment/Clients get confused.
React on 365 is different to vanilla. Same goes for JavaScript vanilla vs js on a html page as an example. Code wise same and methodology is the same but the underlying SaaS is different.
I just have to wait it out a little longer for contracts which I hope it picks up. Applying to perm roles within my field and also to perm roles that allow my to cross over to vanilla work or dynamics.
Last two years been around migrating to azure cloud and development on azure/SharePoint. My role is more of a azure cloud consultant but background is mainly dev work.Comment
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Originally posted by cosmic View PostLast two years been around migrating to azure cloud and development on azure/SharePoint. My role is more of a azure cloud consultant but background is mainly dev work.
Then again, the Microsoft space is not my field so ... what do I know eh...Comment
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Linkedin info
From my linkedin feed, this was from a consulting company posting some recruitment info.
1. We had 210 applications for Agile delivery managers, interviewed 10, rejected 9
2. Rejected around 12 people in UX interviews and still have an open role and
3. Java devs I lost the count of the applications. Was around 1k+, more than 130+ interviews to on-board 40 devs so far.
So for a delivery manager role: 200/1, UX: 12/0 and Java Dev: 1000/40.
Fair enough some of these may be coming from outside the UK but those are some tough odds to overcome. You are going to need to be very good and very lucky.Comment
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