just wondering is the the norm now for hours as the landscape has changed ! and this is for far less ££
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Originally posted by Cookielove View PostIt is fine when wfh to flex you hours....but this is an office role so you can't turn up as and when ....that is the minimum set hours for the team...then the commute is a drive of at least an hour so leaving home say 7.30 maybe a little earlier and then getting home on a good run 6.30 at earliest....I think that is along day ...wfh it doesn't matter but if you add in at least 2 hours plus commuting !
Doubt it will come to fruition as so many applying...Comment
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Originally posted by Cookielove View Postjust wondering is the the norm now for hours as the landscape has changed ! and this is for far less ££Comment
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I am more than well aware dsc ....I am one of these people 25 years plus experience and it is dire!
Strict working hours combined with long daily commutes plus rubbish pay are all part if it....even allowing for all of this I doubt it will happen as volume of applicants so it is pretty grim...how did it go so badly wrong for contractors!?!
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Originally posted by Cookielove View PostI am more than well aware dsc ....I am one of these people 25 years plus experience and it is dire!
Strict working hours combined with long daily commutes plus rubbish pay are all part if it....even allowing for all of this I doubt it will happen as volume of applicants so it is pretty grim...how did it go so badly wrong for contractors!?!
As for not getting even tulip roles - remember often client / employers know that contractors are desperate at the moment and they will leave as soon as the market improves, so they prefer to go with someone less skilled, but also less confident and less likely to just bail when a new opportunity arises. Ideal candidate seems to be someone who accepts low rate thinking it's loads, hasn't got enough skills to jump ship (but enough to maybe be trained and do the job) and gratefully agrees with everything tulipe that the job offers / brings.Last edited by dsc; 19 December 2024, 15:20.Comment
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Is contracting dead these days then?
I've really just been freelancing the last couple of years. But i just had a look on Jobserve to see if i could land myself a big juicy money spinner, but i don't think there's even been a single job with my skillset been posted.
Has everywhere just outsourced to India having realised WFH means there's no point in having UK staff?Comment
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It's been dead for years, is newly dead, is slowly dying or is making a spirited comeback depending on what bollox you've read from your left/right/center leaning news casts/pods/influencers.
Good luck.
qhHe had a negative bluety on a quackhandle and was quadraspazzed on a lifeglug.
I look forward to your all knowing and likely sarcastic and unhelpful reply.
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Originally posted by Robinho View PostIs contracting dead these days then?
I've really just been freelancing the last couple of years. But i just had a look on Jobserve to see if i could land myself a big juicy money spinner, but i don't think there's even been a single job with my skillset been posted.
Has everywhere just outsourced to India having realised WFH means there's no point in having UK staff?
Just imagine how popular HS2 will be now that everyone has worked out using teams is more efficient than travelling to major city for meetings.
WFH & outsourcing are bigger threats than IR35. At least with IR35, once the rates sorted themselves out, with contractor availability and skill set, it would have been manageable.
Outsourcing means for the same amount companies pay for a contractor they can get a company with contract sla in place.
WFH, means no office costs for the company so just end up working as a body shop.
In order since my last investment bank:
2020 IR35
2021 COVID (no contracts)
2022 WFH
2023 Immigration + outsourcing
2024 IT Recession
(Rough timeline)
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Originally posted by Robinho View PostIs contracting dead these days then?
I've really just been freelancing the last couple of years. But i just had a look on Jobserve to see if i could land myself a big juicy money spinner, but i don't think there's even been a single job with my skillset been posted.
Has everywhere just outsourced to India having realised WFH means there's no point in having UK staff?Comment
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I remember when I lurked on here ten years ago, and again eight years ago when I got my first contract and I read all of the same sort of stuff - contracting is dead. [Insert new reason] will end contracting. If I had listened then I wouldn't have had some great years and opportunities.
I wouldn't say I have a niche set of skills - 25 years in IT/Infrastructure projects as PM/Programme Manager predominantly in the logistics industry. In my eight years of contracting I've had two months on the bench during Covid and then took a year out through choice (Sept 23/Oct 23) whilst refusing an extension to the contract I was in at Asda on a programme which still had a couple of years to run. Maybe I've been lucky, maybe my Midlands location has helped - dunno?
The irony is that we're meant to be adaptable - isn't what we're encountering now just another set of circumstances to adapt to?Last edited by fatJock; 19 December 2024, 16:19.Comment
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