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Are high paying contract jobs generally less interesting?

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    Are high paying contract jobs generally less interesting?

    It seems the best paying customers are Finance, Fintech and Government.

    There are some roles out there with day rates of £650-£700, but the technologies are not always the most interesting.

    I'm in doubts whether to focus more on having an interesting role versus a high day rate.

    Is it so that higher paid roles are often more boring jobs or not?

    #2
    Originally posted by ujjain View Post
    It seems the best paying customers are Finance, Fintech and Government.

    There are some roles out there with day rates of £650-£700, but the technologies are not always the most interesting.

    I'm in doubts whether to focus more on having an interesting role versus a high day rate.

    Is it so that higher paid roles are often more boring jobs or not?
    No, it's generally hoped that higher-paid gigs are reward for better-experienced contractors. One does not simply walk into one of those gigs.
    The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist

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      #3
      Originally posted by ujjain View Post
      Are high paying contract jobs generally less interesting?
      No. In my experience, quite the opposite.
      Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

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        #4
        Nope. Specialise to get the highest rates. I can't speak for IT specifically - there may be an increased risk of bench time and constant reskilling if you specialise too much - but, in general, the more interesting and better paid contracts need specialist skills. Supply and demand.

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          #5
          Originally posted by jamesbrown View Post
          Nope. Specialise to get the highest rates. I can't speak for IT specifically - there may be an increased risk of bench time and constant reskilling if you specialise too much - but, in general, the more interesting and better paid contracts need specialist skills. Supply and demand.
          I think on the techy side like me the old days of sitting in your single-skill box have gone. I was trado-Unix (AIX, Solaris, HP-UX) for years and years, no problem getting roles and now I have to do RHEL ESX etc, as well as SAN, firewalls and TSM - environments as a whole....

          Makes it more interesting but you then get percieved as a master of none......

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            #6
            Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
            No. In my experience, quite the opposite.
            My first instinct would be to say you can't generalise like the OP said. There are too many factors involved attempt to come to such a simplistic conclusion.

            Oddly enough my experience seems to be the same as NAT's. If I had to list my gigs in order from lowest to highest rate the more interesting/hectic/fun gigs were down in the lower end. Thinking back they were all roll your sleeves up and get stuck in gigs. I don't think the numbers of gigs we are talking here is enough to prove it's a fact though.
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              #7
              Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
              My first instinct would be to say you can't generalise like the OP said. There are too many factors involved attempt to come to such a simplistic conclusion.

              Oddly enough my experience seems to be the same as NAT's. If I had to list my gigs in order from lowest to highest rate the more interesting/hectic/fun gigs were down in the lower end. Thinking back they were all roll your sleeves up and get stuck in gigs. I don't think the numbers of gigs we are talking here is enough to prove it's a fact though.
              I think that could also, in my experience, correlate to the size of the organisation. A smaller client would want their pound of flesh from you more and would be more likely to have more skills shortages do to the lack of people available.
              The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist

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                #8
                If means more responsibility and a challenge are more interesting for me.
                What is boring for you could not be boring for the others, this can happen if you are doing the same thing for ages.

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by stek View Post
                  I think on the techy side like me the old days of sitting in your single-skill box have gone. I was trado-Unix (AIX, Solaris, HP-UX) for years and years, no problem getting roles and now I have to do RHEL ESX etc, as well as SAN, firewalls and TSM - environments as a whole....

                  Makes it more interesting but you then get percieved as a master of none......
                  Yes, makes sense. I guess a particular combination of skills can also make you a specialist, but it really comes down to supply and demand. If you can position yourself in areas where supply/demand is sufficiently out of whack, you're bananad, but that requires pretty good foresight. In my experience, areas that require many years of formal education/training (vs. allow for learning on-the-job) reduce the supply quite a bit, but I'm not sure how much these generalities are worth across different industries.

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                    #10
                    From experience, the higher paid jobs involve longer hours and more grief.

                    On one project i did I easily had the highest day rate. On an hourly rate it wasn't much different to others.

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