After a few (not many) years of contracting, I went back to permanent employment at the end of March. 1 month is not much but seems enough to start making an assessment of the situation and drawing some conclusions.
What's been good so far?
- I had forgotten how great flexi time was. I log in in the morning...a wee clock/timer starts. I log off in the afternoon...the wee clock stops. In a month I have already accrued 14 hours. 2 full days off I can take. And the company is chilled and easygoing about the flexi: we clock in, we then go for breakfast, THEN we start working.
- I needed a desk, chair and external monitor. Everything got delivered before my first day.
- Time for personal development is encouraged. When I don't have anything to do, I can read stuff or watch videos/tutorials and nobody raise any eyebrows. In my last couple of contracts it felt like any single minute of my day I had to have some work assigned to me. The mentality was "we pay X amount a day for this guy, let's squeeze as much as we can out of him".
- Yearly performance reviews and personal development plans aren't that bad. I haven't had a quarterly review and temp check with my manager so I can't speak for that, but I had a 30 minutes call with him about smart objectives and personal dev plan. Then I spent 1 hour writing them up and loading them into our hr system. And that was it. No need to do anything else for the next 11 months. I'll never understand why contractors are so bothered by these...
What's been not so good?
- Monthly pay sucks. I miss my weekly pay.
- E-learning training. There are new training modules every quarter and they're all awful. Dry, boring, badly structured. Did not miss them in the slightest.
- Team meetings and "social zoom fridays". I could escape them when I was a contractor; now I have to pretend I care about "Sara's new kittens".
Do I regret going permanent?
No, it was the right time. I was not enjoying being a contractor; I needed more stability and the lack of roles didn't make me feel stable and confident at all. For the first time, in 2020 I had 2 months on the bench and I was bored out of my mind. Didn't want to go through it again. Now there are even less contract roles than when I decided to go permie, so no regret whatsoever.
Next update when I hit the 6 months mark
What's been good so far?
- I had forgotten how great flexi time was. I log in in the morning...a wee clock/timer starts. I log off in the afternoon...the wee clock stops. In a month I have already accrued 14 hours. 2 full days off I can take. And the company is chilled and easygoing about the flexi: we clock in, we then go for breakfast, THEN we start working.
- I needed a desk, chair and external monitor. Everything got delivered before my first day.
- Time for personal development is encouraged. When I don't have anything to do, I can read stuff or watch videos/tutorials and nobody raise any eyebrows. In my last couple of contracts it felt like any single minute of my day I had to have some work assigned to me. The mentality was "we pay X amount a day for this guy, let's squeeze as much as we can out of him".
- Yearly performance reviews and personal development plans aren't that bad. I haven't had a quarterly review and temp check with my manager so I can't speak for that, but I had a 30 minutes call with him about smart objectives and personal dev plan. Then I spent 1 hour writing them up and loading them into our hr system. And that was it. No need to do anything else for the next 11 months. I'll never understand why contractors are so bothered by these...
What's been not so good?
- Monthly pay sucks. I miss my weekly pay.
- E-learning training. There are new training modules every quarter and they're all awful. Dry, boring, badly structured. Did not miss them in the slightest.
- Team meetings and "social zoom fridays". I could escape them when I was a contractor; now I have to pretend I care about "Sara's new kittens".
Do I regret going permanent?
No, it was the right time. I was not enjoying being a contractor; I needed more stability and the lack of roles didn't make me feel stable and confident at all. For the first time, in 2020 I had 2 months on the bench and I was bored out of my mind. Didn't want to go through it again. Now there are even less contract roles than when I decided to go permie, so no regret whatsoever.
Next update when I hit the 6 months mark
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