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Is it acceptable to discuss rates with other contractors working at the same client?
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Originally posted by ladymuck View PostExactly this. As I said, I am being paid a rate I'm happy with. My bills and holidays are paid. Life is too short to spend it comparing myself against other people.Comment
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Originally posted by craig1 View Post
About three months later, my mate found out my rate because he was asked to do a business case on contractor rates for a new scheme and had access to all in the company for example purposes. He threw a right wobbler when he found out my rate, accused me of being a "traitor", sent a "f*** you" email to the COO who oversaw our work and stormed out the same day.Comment
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Never discuss rates. Full stop.
This thread reminds me of a colleague at her leaving drinks who said she to me she was on xxx a day and negotiated a 20% day rate increase mid contract and that I should also ask for day rate increase as I must still be on xxx a day as well! Didnt want to tell her i was actually on 160% her xxx a dayI mean - what if they decided to call her to hire her back at a later date? and I didnt want to ruin her leaving drinks...
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Originally posted by jmo21 View PostWhat a tool. Have you spoke to him since?
Most people just don't get that there's usually a good reason why people get different rates. I did a contract in 2011 at a company that was a three hour commute each way from home and not a nice reputation company either, they ramped up the rates until I agreed to take it for six months to the point that I was on £300 per day more than my peers plus getting weekly bill/weekly pay compared to the usual monthly bill/three month pay that contractors got. I know this because I controlled the budget for the entire de-merger, it was made bluntly clear to me that if I disclosed my rate and terms then I'd be out the same day. I wasn't anything special, I just had a skillset that was hard to find at the time and they had a bad reputation as a company, they had to pay way over the odds to get me while most contractors there had generic skillsets and were jobber type contractors. If I'd disclosed my rate to anyone at the company then they'd have had very big morale problems during a critical de-merger project.
Then you get the contractors who really are disguised employees, they're the ones who really get held up on a comparable "salary" rate I find. Every contractor has different circumstances, skills and negotiating power, that's why they have different rates, it's almost never a personal slight on the lower-paid contractor, they just don't have that contract's requirements to get a better rate.Comment
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Originally posted by craig1 View Post...negotiating power..
There is no benefit to the client for the contractor failing to negotiate the maximum possible rate the client was willing to pay after a reasonable cut by the agency. The agency is not going to pass the rate reduction back to the client.Only the agency benefits in that position, so it's in their interest to low ball the applicants to see if they can find 'a mug' so the agency gets a bigger slice of the pie.
Only way for the contractor to fight back is to play hard ball at risk of losing the contract/renewal or determine the best rate possible and use that knowledge at renewal time, to squeeze the agency back to what margin they should have been on at the start.
Just don't be a bell-end that ends up punching out people and burning bridges by throwing your toys out of the pram. Then again the fewer bell-ends that get another contract or renewal the better for us contractors.Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.Comment
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Under no circumstances should you discuss your rate with other contractors or permies. The only time I'd ever consider discussing rate is with the client, when we're considering going direct - but this goes hand in hand with all the other awkward terms you need to agree to.Comment
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I worked regularly with the same handful of contractors on a client site. We did discuss rates in general terms when no permies were around. With one or two lads I trusted, we did discuss actual rates we were on. I found they were on a rate I wouldnt have accepted for the job but then again, they were local while I had a 160 mile a day commute.
Sure in the contract T&Cs it is generally forbidden to discuss rates but so what. If you're daft enough to tell the whole office or people you dont know \ trust, then watch out.Comment
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I never reveal my rate and to be honest how can you be sure what the other contractors are telling you is genuine? There is a young contractor where I am, pretty much every time we've been out to the pub he tries to get this info out of me - I would lie to him just to wind him up, but he clearly has a big mouth so I could see that causing me problems. I believe the contract states something about never discussing rates as well.Comment
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Originally posted by Jaws View Post... I would lie to him just to wind him up, but he clearly has a big mouth so I could see that causing me problems. ...
There's also the permies to worry about in that some may know what the client is paying the agency and think that is being forwarded onto the contractor. I've seen permies 'joking' about how the contractors must be rich with what they're getting paid. I 'joke' that it's the agents getting rich as they take '50%' for doing nothing. Smoke and mirrors all the way.Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.Comment
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