Originally posted by agentzero
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State of the Market
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I am out the game now but looking on here and on LinkedIn I think your experience is fairly atypical of the current contract market. -
It's also not "State of the Economy" really! Although the two are obviously related. Anyway, off topic posts removed.Originally posted by agentzero View PostA reminder that this is a "State of the Market" thread and not "The poor state of Oliverson's life".
Market has picked up in the last two months and have been received more calls than I know what to do with.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Fair comment. Word of mouth seems the way of it now. I'm not smug with this arrangement, as it pushes out good contractors from finding work. It's as if the impenetrable world of insurance is now across most sectors and recommendations are one of the few ways to get work. I'm not working full time on any single contract and like it this way, but scope creep is happening more often as clients try to get many more hours than they say they are willing to pay for. It's a ruse to exploit desperate contractors. I've managed to stop two clients expecting full time office hours for what certainly is part time 2 days a week project.Originally posted by SussexSeagull View Post
I am out the game now but looking on here and on LinkedIn I think your experience is fairly atypical of the current contract market.Comment
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You do hear of people who are in a similar position to you and are doing ok or indeed quite well. I agree about word of mouth but it doesn't help if they haven't got any work going.Originally posted by agentzero View Post
Fair comment. Word of mouth seems the way of it now. I'm not smug with this arrangement, as it pushes out good contractors from finding work. It's as if the impenetrable world of insurance is now across most sectors and recommendations are one of the few ways to get work. I'm not working full time on any single contract and like it this way, but scope creep is happening more often as clients try to get many more hours than they say they are willing to pay for. It's a ruse to exploit desperate contractors. I've managed to stop two clients expecting full time office hours for what certainly is part time 2 days a week project.
Problem is if the eco-system of contracting gets dismantled it will reach a point, or indeed might have already, where there is a terminal decline and it can't scale back up if the market improves and can't be a sizeable industry again.
Good luck to you though.Comment
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Had a nice chat with a recruiter this morning. Everyone is in agreement, that this is the worst job market in decades.
Talked to him about why the banks were not hiring and it seems they can avoid hiring contractors (IR35) by just outsourcing the work to consultancies on the same rate but outside IR35.
Makes sense, why would they risk getting fined. Does look like IR35 is one of the big reasons why contracting is a finished market.Comment
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The every so often call bomb for me.
2 calls this morning both for the same thing.
Tech I have not touched in 13 years.
Punter is "local".
Definitely Inside though the conversations didn't get that far.
Rate - crap.
Obviously there is an ancient CV kicking around somewhere on the internet.Former IPSE member
My WebsiteComment
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But haven't consultancies historically backfilled with contractors?Originally posted by SchumiStars View PostTalked to him about why the banks were not hiring and it seems they can avoid hiring contractors (IR35) by just outsourcing the work to consultancies on the same rate but outside IR35.Comment
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Not the ones from India/off-shore. They normally have a queue of people wanting to work for peanuts and a visa in my experience.Originally posted by fatJock View Post
But haven't consultancies historically backfilled with contractors?
The only problem with that is, when they get their visas they become a contractor. So now we have even more competition from the consultancies and new contractors.
Hence why there is fewer jobs, contracts and more people available. And this of course causes the rates to drop. A horrible cycle.
This will only end when demand out strips supply. We need a tech revolution, a market distributor or something that will require enterprises to force a massive tech change.
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Interesting point. Are there fewer people in their early to mid-30s, continuing to go into contracting?Originally posted by SussexSeagull View Post
Problem is if the eco-system of contracting gets dismantled it will reach a point, or indeed might have already, where there is a terminal decline and it can't scale back up if the market improves and can't be a sizeable industry again.
10-15 years ago it seemed that I worked with a lot of contractors who were under 35. Now there seem to be fewer younger ones about.
This forum seems to be disproportionately populated by people well past 40 so I don't think we're particularly representative of 'the market'.Comment
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AI clearly isn't the tech revolution that was anticipated, at least in terms of job creation, contract opportunities etc.Originally posted by SchumiStars View Post
So now we have even more competition from the consultancies and new contractors.
Hence why there is fewer jobs, contracts and more people available. And this of course causes the rates to drop. A horrible cycle.
This will only end when demand out strips supply. We need a tech revolution, a market distributor or something that will require enterprises to force a massive tech change.
Almost every day now there is a warning about the insane level of capex investment going into AI infrastructure and tech stock market valuations.
Google's CEO warned yesterday about the irrational AI investment boom following on from notable warnings from the Bank of England and JP Morgan's CEO.
The one that really worried me was the CEO of Klarna who has been one of the biggest AI proponents. He fired 700 customer service staff and replaced them with AI bots which ended up being a disaster so they had to hire staff again.
When someone like him that warns he's really worried about irrational AI investment levels then it's really time to start to worry.
It feels like 1999 again...Comment
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