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Asked to work considerably longer hours to hit a deadline

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    #31
    Originally posted by SlipTheJab View Post
    I had this at an interview many moons ago, the client mentioned they expected overtime, as it was an hourly rate contract I was more that happy to oblige , so long as everything is up front I don't see the problem.
    In that case it's not called 'overtime', just 'time'.

    Overtime implies, IMO, either more pay or no pay for the extra hours.
    See You Next Tuesday

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      #32
      Originally posted by jmo21 View Post
      +1 to the "on occasion, if absolutely necessary" comments, and also if I broke something important.
      .
      IR35 problem there? As a supplier, if you break something you need to fix it at your own expense, not charge the client for the extra work?
      Best 4g signal is in
      [ ] Trap 1
      [X] Trap 2
      [ ] Trap 3

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        #33
        Repeat after me:

        "How will I be compensated?"

        It's like garlic to a vampire.

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          #34
          Originally posted by MrLoveBucket View Post
          IR35 problem there? As a supplier, if you break something you need to fix it at your own expense, not charge the client for the extra work?
          I was referring to working longer hours unpaid.

          If I was being paid overtime already to work longer, then I'd already be there :-)

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            #35
            Originally posted by MrLoveBucket View Post
            IR35 problem there? As a supplier, if you break something you need to fix it at your own expense, not charge the client for the extra work?
            I wouldn't have thought so - or at least it would depend on your line of work, I expect developers to break things (Preferably not in live systems), I also expect there to be bugs in new systems or new features added to new systems which will inevitably slip through testing and show up months down the line.

            I wouldnt expect a client to come to me and say - you're fixing bugs today so we're no paying you.

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              #36
              Originally posted by Snarf View Post
              I wouldn't have thought so - or at least it would depend on your line of work, I expect developers to break things (Preferably not in live systems), I also expect there to be bugs in new systems or new features added to new systems which will inevitably slip through testing and show up months down the line.

              I wouldnt expect a client to come to me and say - you're fixing bugs today so we're no paying you.
              Testing has completed successfully, but unpredictable behaviour may occur??

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