I try and reserve judgement about places until I've worked there myself. It's not the same experience for every one. I've worked at places where the experience varies from department to department when you talk to other contractors there.
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Lloyds Bank Group - permanent
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Originally posted by vwdan View PostI'm working with a financial outfit who're just finishing up paying the price for that one, having now got it all back in house.
I don't know why they do it to themselves - I'd love to meet the salespeople involved.
I can only assume the people deciding to do it are focused on short term gains, hitting targets etc, and they move on before it all turns to #$£%.Comment
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Originally posted by yMyjgT View PostIt's stunning isn't it?
I can only assume the people deciding to do it are focused on short term gains, hitting targets etc, and they move on before it all turns to #$£%.
It was clear that senior management were on commission for offshoring as much as they could, with little regard for skills or service.Comment
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Originally posted by ChimpMaster View PostSeveral years ago I contracted at a bank that outsourced much of their IT work to India too. Was the most depressing place I ever worked at.
It was clear that senior management were on commission for offshoring as much as they could, with little regard for skills or service.Comment
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Originally posted by ChimpMaster View PostSeveral years ago I contracted at a bank that outsourced much of their IT work to India too. Was the most depressing place I ever worked at.
It was clear that senior management were on commission for offshoring as much as they could, with little regard for skills or service.
service delivery goes to tulip , clients complain , clients leave , new chief exec comes in with remit to get everything back in house, whatever the cost , collects big bonus cheque and leaves
and repeat ........Comment
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Originally posted by PrestonChris View Postthis has happened at 3 places I have worked at , new Chief Exec comes in with a remit to cut costs , outsources everything he can , collects his big bonus and ****s off
service delivery goes to tulip , clients complain , clients leave , new chief exec comes in with remit to get everything back in house, whatever the cost , collects big bonus cheque and leaves
and repeat ........The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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Originally posted by yMyjgT View Post4.988 according to the Intranet homepage!
Not noticed any animosity towards contractors.....mainly because it's around a 50/50 split in the area I'm in.
Apart from the many many IT support people all over the UK. Did you mean IT Helpdesk or something?Comment
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Originally posted by MrMarkyMark View PostShame LBG are so tulip to work for
* The bad advice to invest in Microsoft SilverLight (circa 2009/2010) and kick out the Java engineering expertise.
* The terrible merger with HBOS
Cheeser's Price! (phonetic)
We, The tax payer, still own 5% of 'em But the package is impressive and beats London's typical starting package. Strange they killed off WFH. Why? Legacy technology Reuters MarketsLink still doing the rounds over there (St. Paul's office), maybe?Comment
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Originally posted by ChimpMaster View PostSeveral years ago I contracted at a bank that outsourced much of their IT work to India too. Was the most depressing place I ever worked at.
It was clear that senior management were on commission for offshoring as much as they could, with little regard for skills or service.
In the simple "profit = revenue - cost" equation, unless you are an absolute superstar, you won't be affecting revenue much. The easiest route is therefore slash costs. Doesn't matter who is affected, the board's bonus payments are at stake here. Strip all the costs out, offshore to bobland and boom, there's your profit. Of course, nobody has actually considered the ability to execute three years down the line.
These executives are known as seagulls. They fly in, tulip over everything, take your chips and leave you to clean up afterwards.The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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Originally posted by LondonManc View PostSounds all too familiar. It's just a case of jumping from company to company as they bring things back in house.Comment
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