Originally posted by NowPermOutsideUK
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Perm offer(s) - take the first one available, or stall for as long as possible
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Originally posted by dsc View PostSo #2 came back but their offer was way below #1, so I told #1 it's a go, got the contract through yesterday, so things moved really fast.
Today had an interview for a remote contract in Denmark, that also moved very quickly and they offered it straight away. I said yes as the rates are double what an average contract is in the UK, so it would be mental to walk away. Kicks off in 3 weeks.
I've not signed the initial contract from #1, but will need to fairly quickly as my start date is mid week next week. I reckon safest option is to sign and simply carry on with perm position just in case the contract position gets canned in the next three weeks? Notice for #1 is one week.
Good luckLeave a comment:
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Originally posted by dsc View PostSo #2 came back but their offer was way below #1, so I told #1 it's a go, got the contract through yesterday, so things moved really fast.
Today had an interview for a remote contract in Denmark, that also moved very quickly and they offered it straight away. I said yes as the rates are double what an average contract is in the UK, so it would be mental to walk away. Kicks off in 3 weeks.
I've not signed the initial contract from #1, but will need to fairly quickly as my start date is mid week next week. I reckon safest option is to sign and simply carry on with perm position just in case the contract position gets canned in the next three weeks? Notice for #1 is one week.
Do both at same time !!!!
Fill your boots man
Sent from my iPhone using Contractor UK ForumLeave a comment:
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So #2 came back but their offer was way below #1, so I told #1 it's a go, got the contract through yesterday, so things moved really fast.
Today had an interview for a remote contract in Denmark, that also moved very quickly and they offered it straight away. I said yes as the rates are double what an average contract is in the UK, so it would be mental to walk away. Kicks off in 3 weeks.
I've not signed the initial contract from #1, but will need to fairly quickly as my start date is mid week next week. I reckon safest option is to sign and simply carry on with perm position just in case the contract position gets canned in the next three weeks? Notice for #1 is one week.Leave a comment:
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Massive thanks for all the replies, I think the best option will be to accept and see what else happens, as many said, there's no guarantee I'll get anything else, so this might be my actual perm job for a while. It's engineering and the industry is deemed "dirty" for a lack of a better word, filled with rather, lets say "rough" types, so interactions might get nasty / heated etc. Throughout my career I always avoided this sector as it's rather uninteresting and I don't really want it on my CV as sectors tend to "stick" and can affect getting jobs outside.
Btw still haven't heard from #2 even though they are aware I have an offer from #1 and getting any info about the job from #3 seems impossible (at this point I don't even know where the job is or what salary it is). It seems that #1 are keen to get me on board and I might be their only candidate at this point, but sooner or later they'll realise what is going on.
To make things a bit more complicated I've heard that a contract position I was after and lost got slightly re-written (whatever that means) and that they are now considering me for the role, so I have an interview lined up for Friday. Of course if this goes ahead it trumps everything, but there's still a risk it might get canned, so having a perm backup just in case would work well.Leave a comment:
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A bird in the hand and all that. This is a buyer's market, not a seller's. If you stall, be prepared to find the employer has dragged someone else in.Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by dsc View PostI know this is a perm related thread, so feel free to move to general.
As some (most?) contractors here I started applying for perm jobs to avoid having to live off my savings. Basically went through a month of hitting apply to most things which I was a fit for. Landed a few interviews, currently at different stages with three companies:
1. Offer from a small company which does business in an industry I wouldn't normally touch with a bargepole. Pay is OK for perm, wfh unless you have to go to site to test things. Not crazy about the company myself and this would definitely not by my first or even second choice.
2. Big, fairly well known European company, owed by an even bigger US company, application went really fast, in two days they arranged a date for a call, had it today and they want the final stage probably by the end of this week. Work they do seems interesting and it would look good on a CV.
3. Amazon - dragging their heels, but I reckon they have thousands of CVs. Should have the final stage interview(s) within a month.
I've told company 1 that I'm waiting to hear back from two other companies, I can probably stall them till the end of the week but that is it, maybe delay the start by a week as well. Company 2 knows about offer from 1, so might move quickly, or might decide to bin me, who knows. Company 3 probably doesn't give a tulip about my situation, so I doubt they would speed things up. Preference is back to front, so 3, 2, 1.
Any advice? Take offer 1, carry on with 2/3 and just leave if smth works out? Or stall 1 till 2 offers (IF they offer), then maybe leave 2 as well if 3 offers (that would be a mess).
Original plan was to take whatever, then switch to a contract, but I'm 95% sure my industry won't offer contracts for a very long time (if ever again).
Accept the offer and start onboarding, because literally anything could happen in the current environment. Jobs are getting canned on a daily basis.
Oh also, theres no guarantee you'll get the other jobs. Or any guarantee that they wont get pulled.Last edited by sira; 29 September 2020, 14:18.Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by Eirikur View PostJust take you will have a probation period of at least 6 months during which you can give notice in 1 or 2 weeks. First month often no notice required.
Often times people forget that the probation period is for both parties to understand if they're a good fit for each other and not just for the employer to see if the employee is good enough for them.Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by Lance View PostSo if the OP was to identify as female they could tick two woke boxes with one hire....
Just a thought.
Personally being Amazon and with their poor reputation, I would just laugh.Leave a comment:
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Just take you will have a probation period of at least 6 months during which you can give notice in 1 or 2 weeks. First month often no notice required.Leave a comment:
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