Originally posted by Alex B
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It's the only chance of getting paid if you did.
As the other contributors have said - no signed timesheet, no pay. You've also learned the hard way that no notice is the short end of the stick; many firms are nice about it and will sign off your timesheets/let you work your notice; others will simply look to cut costs completely and get you out that day. Main thing to learn is to get everything in writing that they promise (even if it means printing it off or forwarding it to your company email address before you leave) so that you can hold them to it.
The cynic in me thinks that the agent might have trousered the four extra weeks, but you'll not know without contacting your old client directly. If you feel aggrieved, you may want to take the gamble; if you were on, say, £500 a day, that's £8000 that's worth chasing to see if the end client have confirmed payment to the agency. DO NOT SPEAK TO THE AGENCY until you have established if the client has paid. If they haven't and you haven't got evidence that they said they'd pay the extra four weeks, then you've not got a leg to stand on.
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