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State of the Market

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    Originally posted by SussexSeagull View Post

    Ironically, with hindsight, the longest contracts I did were amongst the worst career moves I ever did in the long term because you fall into a rut of turning up, doing what turns into repetitive work and keep invoicing.
    Yep I agree.

    I had a 3yr contract and when I came back out, the technology had moved on considerably. I had loads of experience of existing software but nothing new.

    I spent some time interviewing for roles which I could do but the methods (git, tdd, jira, node) were not my toolkit. Had so spend some time, in lower paid roles for the upskill.

    I say lower rate, I would be over the moon now with that or any offer! Right off to bed, more running and gym tomorrow.

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      Originally posted by SussexSeagull View Post

      Ironically, with hindsight, the longest contracts I did were amongst the worst career moves I ever did in the long term because you fall into a rut of turning up, doing what turns into repetitive work and keep invoicing.
      I know that feeling. I can feel the brain rot setting in when I've been somewhere for too long.

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        Originally posted by ladymuck View Post

        I know that feeling. I can feel the brain rot setting in when I've been somewhere for too long.
        Me too, as i negotiate new five month SOW taking me into year three due to state of the market.

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          Done 2 longer contracts - both 3 years, outside IR35 on an open ended rolling contract. Both were great, really interesting work, and constant billing for a long period like that is great for your personal finances too! Both fairly unique situations though, I don't really expect to find things like that. But I do agree about the risk of stagnation skills wise, you have to keep up in this business.

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            Originally posted by SussexSeagull View Post
            I think this is all fair comment. Plus I think offshoring has improved to the point that even if it isn't the best option in terms of quality, the money savings make it worthwhile.
            The money savings of offshoring give the impression of it being a good deal. Having worked with offshore teams in my last gig, I am not convinced there is really a saving - they were bloody hopeless and workshy and the communication barrier was difficult.

            Earlier we were talking about Agile slowing the work down - there was one sprint we did where the offshore devs spent 2 weeks to write literally 3 lines of code. Last week I wrote 1500 lines of code in a morning! In my view a smaller but higher quality team of British engineers would have cost the same and moved at least twice as fast, so would have been twice as cost effective. Shame its hard to get this accross to those who hold the purse strings somehow.

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              Good news - I have just been informed I am a perfect match for this role: Senior Java developer (Chinese speaking)

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                Originally posted by willendure View Post
                Done 2 longer contracts - both 3 years, outside IR35 on an open ended rolling contract. Both were great, really interesting work, and constant billing for a long period like that is great for your personal finances too! Both fairly unique situations though, I don't really expect to find things like that. But I do agree about the risk of stagnation skills wise, you have to keep up in this business.
                All of my contracts have been over two years in duration...until last September.

                I have done three short term contracts since then with breaks in between. Those non billing months really do add up.

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                  Originally posted by willendure View Post

                  The money savings of offshoring give the impression of it being a good deal. Having worked with offshore teams in my last gig, I am not convinced there is really a saving - they were bloody hopeless and workshy and the communication barrier was difficult.

                  Earlier we were talking about Agile slowing the work down - there was one sprint we did where the offshore devs spent 2 weeks to write literally 3 lines of code. Last week I wrote 1500 lines of code in a morning! In my view a smaller but higher quality team of British engineers would have cost the same and moved at least twice as fast, so would have been twice as cost effective. Shame its hard to get this accross to those who hold the purse strings somehow.
                  My favourite recent example was a Technical Author whose first language wasn't English, who booked £65,000 of resource time for updating the text on seven web pages via a Content Management System. Having to explain to a Technical Author the use of to/two/too, there/their etc was painful. The acronym for Number Once blew his mind too.

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                    Saw a job but it says that you must have active SC Clearance as a minimum, with DV-Clearance a preference.

                    DV I don't know a huge about but I think that is not easy or quick and is usually for senior civil servant types...anyone know?

                    I don't have current SC clearance and I've never had DV clearance.

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                      I've said it a few times on here before but the .Net Developer Contract market is gone, and from what it seems other developer tech stacks aren't faring much better.

                      Currently on a FTC, which ends in 10 months and I've realistically got 7 years until I can even think about retiring. So I'm looking at using the next 10 months to try and pick a niche that will see me out.

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