Originally posted by silverlight001
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State of the Market
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Quite possibly a key factor. Chancers going contracting after 2-3 years and being no better than an equivalent, but far cheaper, option in Prague, Warsaw et al isn't doing UK contractors any favours.The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist -
<marquee> for the win!Originally posted by oliverson View PostDon't you mean <blink>Unbelievable.</blink>?The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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ha ha ha - fair play. You got it.Originally posted by LondonManc View Post<marquee> for the win!Comment
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Apparently my Test Scenarios were unusable, putting aside the fact I have been producing Test Scenarios for 18 years without any complaint.Originally posted by SussexSeagull View PostSlightly different but I had to do a test on 'Testing Fundamentals' the other evening. Been doing it for eighteen years and it wasn't that good a daily rate.
Seems to be the way it is going now.
Now you may point out that this might be a case of me not being up to scratch, and you might be right, but not long after the agent got in touch I saw the job re-advertised. Are they seriously saying with the current levels of available testers in the market, they couldn't find seven suitable ones to do a basic testing job?
That reeks a bit of advertising a job for 28 days before looking abroad to save money.
Regardless, I have an interview for a permanent job next week as the Testing contract market just looks broken.Comment
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Who could you raise this as an issue to? Your MP?Originally posted by SussexSeagull View PostApparently my Test Scenarios were unusable, putting aside the fact I have been producing Test Scenarios for 18 years without any complaint.
Now you may point out that this might be a case of me not being up to scratch, and you might be right, but not long after the agent got in touch I saw the job re-advertised. Are they seriously saying with the current levels of available testers in the market, they couldn't find seven suitable ones to do a basic testing job?
That reeks a bit of advertising a job for 28 days before looking abroad to save money.
Regardless, I have an interview for a permanent job next week as the Testing contract market just looks broken.The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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I can't really provide definitive evidence and they would probably just claim they can't find seven suitable people, which of course in the current climate is nonsense.Originally posted by LondonManc View PostWho could you raise this as an issue to? Your MP?Comment
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But they're a known onshorer of bobs?Originally posted by SussexSeagull View PostI can't really provide definitive evidence and they would probably just claim they can't find seven suitable people, which of course in the current climate is nonsense.The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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Not that I know of. The other option is the recruiting manager is being unbelievably picky to the point of impossibility but either way if you can't find seven testers to do a very good job for you in the current market you really need to have a look at yourself.Originally posted by LondonManc View PostBut they're a known onshorer of bobs?Comment
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There is good money to be made in testing, but not in "basic" testing (whatever that means). Outside of large organisations testing jobs are done by either programmers themselves, PMs, product owners, everyone in the office, offshore testers in India, or on platforms like AWS Device Farm. What I'd look at is learning how to design and write tests that run on AWS Device Farm. This is the direction the industry is going.Originally posted by SussexSeagull View PostApparently my Test Scenarios were unusable, putting aside the fact I have been producing Test Scenarios for 18 years without any complaint.
Now you may point out that this might be a case of me not being up to scratch, and you might be right, but not long after the agent got in touch I saw the job re-advertised. Are they seriously saying with the current levels of available testers in the market, they couldn't find seven suitable ones to do a basic testing job?
That reeks a bit of advertising a job for 28 days before looking abroad to save money.
Regardless, I have an interview for a permanent job next week as the Testing contract market just looks broken.You're awesome! Get yourself a t-shirt.Comment
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There certainly seems to be a move towards automation. Problem is that automated testing is difficult to pick up on the fly and when you get past record and replay and basic scripting (e.g. putting in delays) it is more development than testing. Why a fully paid up developer would want to go into automated testing is beyond easy but that is a conversation for another time. He actual test cases should be designed by a Test Analyst as well.Originally posted by squarepeg View PostThere is good money to be made in testing, but not in "basic" testing (whatever that means). Outside of large organisations testing jobs are done by either programmers themselves, PMs, product owners, everyone in the office, offshore testers in India, or on platforms like AWS Device Farm. What I'd look at is learning how to design and write tests that run on AWS Device Farm. This is the direction the industry is going.
I agree business resource is getting used to do more testing. This had a place but is no replacement for getting a specialist to do it.
Sadly this seems to be an old fashioned view.
Anyway, I have an interview for a permanent job this week. Will be a downgrade in lifestyle but if you are having six months or more between contracts the financial argument for contracting doesn't add up anymore.Comment
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