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I assume by "outsourced bods", Bluenose meant the latter and that gov't were looking to replace these with regular contractors - could be wrong.
Yeah, that's correct. I think IR35 has helped in that respect, I think its human nature that when two rate card numbers are closer together people see a closer relationship of the quality of the resources
Yeah, that's correct. I think IR35 has helped in that respect, I think its human nature that when two rate card numbers are closer together people see a closer relationship of the quality of the resources
There is a secondary issue of using contractors gives you the named trusted resource you want from day 1 to the end of the project where a consultancy may happily pull a resource if something comes along.
I was coming to the end of a 3-month contract in the public sector (UX/UI) - I got extended yesterday for 6 months
The UX market is picking up nicely after the xmas break. I'm receiving 3-4 emails a week from agents which is not bad for my industry. Most of them are inside contracts with a 50-50 split between fully remote and 1-2 days a week in the office.
I was coming to the end of a 3-month contract in the public sector (UX/UI) - I got extended yesterday for 6 months
The UX market is picking up nicely after the xmas break. I'm receiving 3-4 emails a week from agents which is not bad for my industry. Most of them are inside contracts with a 50-50 split between fully remote and 1-2 days a week in the office.
Not seeing that at all, at least not for Vue.JS and Angular roles - what areas do you specialise in?
Ux/ui/interaction designer roles is what I'm talking about.
Make the most of it. In 5-10 years time, the outputs of both of these roles will largely be produced by AI/ML engines - they will generate both the UX (based on a set of model inputs) and also the UI itself. It's scary how fast this stuff is moving.
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