A contract would require me to spend 3 full days a week away from my home city. It's too far to commute on a daily basis, it would be too expensive too. The other 2 days I'd be able to WFH.
What would be a good reason to accept it? The call I had with the client wasn't particularly enlightening, the contract could go either way in terms of it being useful for my CV, giving me more experience. The dayrate is ok but nothing I couldn't get in my home city.
The only positive I can think of is that I would be able to use and enhance more recently gained skills, it's a field that greatly interests me and is lucrative long term. But - as I said before - I can't tell from the initial conversation the likelihood of the various projects actually delivering anything.
The hesitation comes from the facts that a) I don't want to leave a client within a month or two, b) I have commitments in my home city so being away so much would have consequences c) the town I'd be working in is pretty boring, especially mid-week.
But the lure of potentially ending up using my new skill set is quite strong. I always learn something new with each contract.
Your experiences and perhaps a different angle here would help me. Thank you.
What would be a good reason to accept it? The call I had with the client wasn't particularly enlightening, the contract could go either way in terms of it being useful for my CV, giving me more experience. The dayrate is ok but nothing I couldn't get in my home city.
The only positive I can think of is that I would be able to use and enhance more recently gained skills, it's a field that greatly interests me and is lucrative long term. But - as I said before - I can't tell from the initial conversation the likelihood of the various projects actually delivering anything.
The hesitation comes from the facts that a) I don't want to leave a client within a month or two, b) I have commitments in my home city so being away so much would have consequences c) the town I'd be working in is pretty boring, especially mid-week.
But the lure of potentially ending up using my new skill set is quite strong. I always learn something new with each contract.
Your experiences and perhaps a different angle here would help me. Thank you.
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