Originally posted by lecyclist
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When do you walk away?
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If you are 4 years from retirement, wouldn't it be worth visualising what kind of gig would be to good to end your career on? If there is a barrier to entry in that area, use the time in your current role to get skilled up.Leave a comment:
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Thank you everyone. So clearly two different approaches from people - bill as long as you can vs keep moving/learning.
I do feel that I have already billed for too long and I do get a point about being institutionalised - I am part of the furniture - network more like these days
I sat down and got the resume refreshed, and while I am not going to jump at the next chance - I will if the role and money is right - if nothing comes around then I'll just stick around and keep billing.Leave a comment:
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It is brave and courageous to have the attitude of I need to move each year or I need to be excited to go to work each day
I’ve always been at companies as long as I could and each time I moved it was because the project finished or the money finished. I was always ok to do not much and get paid but maybe that’s just me!Leave a comment:
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I tend to get itchy feet after a year, definitely after 15 months. I'm currently 18 months in on my current gig, extension on its way for another three months and the PM has forecast me into their plans for Q1 next year.
Like you, the work isn't challenging, the team is good (90% contractors), the rate is good.
BUT! I do have to look the gift horse in the mouth as I know I'm stagnating. There are days where I just about drag myself out of bed in time for the first meeting.
I have always said that if the prospect of the job makes you want to take a duvet day, every day, then it's time to move on.
I will see the year out, and have told the PM that I may not stick around for all of Q1 as I'll be looking for the next gig then.Leave a comment:
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I've been in this exact spot before - never-ending renewals, high rate, few years to (also early!) retirement.
First you are de-skilled then institutionalised, ticking off the years. This is not what we went contracting for!
I stayed too long and regretted it - wasted years really. Early retirement is a moving target.
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You've been there 3 years so your clearly doing something right. If you plan to retire soon then stick it out. If you don't then maybe time to move on and refresh your skills on another gig.
I've had one gig that lasted 3 year in Asia, I never felt it went against me. In fact it's made me what I am today. It's a great talking point.Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by BigDataPro View PostAs a PM/Programme Mgr, your main skills are likely to be communication, managing expectations and some scrum master activities. Having a high level understanding of Cloud, DevOps helps. All of these are common in all projects, so no need to worry about 'How will it look in CV?'
If I were you, I would keep billing while trying to find ways to 'help' other project if my ego permits.
Reg. your other point, I do have great track record in this team, less worried that they might do something abruptly and there is a budget (which I control). But I do get your point, given a choice we would all prefer no or planned break between gigs rather than be at mercy of keyword middlemen.Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
Yep IMO you are done. You are coasting which means you are losing skills and being inside, losing money as well.
The rate might be above average but you are inside aren't you? So you'll be 35%+ down on an outside gig?
You've had it cushy with the 100% remote but it was in response to a pandemic. Many roles will return to the office to some extent so it's something that's going to be more the norm. If you don't want to do that then most definitely stay at your gig. It WILL be required for some roles so can't avoid that.
So... as all these what do I do posts... it's all down to your own personal circumstances that only you can decide. We can give you our opinion on what we would do but can't see how that's much use to you as we don't know the exact details.
That said... from what I see.... Your contract is done, you aren't doing anything proactive and the skills will be slipping. I'd be out of there in a shot because I CBA with the dross after a gig. I want a new one to get my teeth in to. It's what I contract for, not to sit at a desk and while the hours away. BUT you want 100% remote, you only have four years to go and sounds like you are financially stable. I think that would tell you to stay. Your next gig could be a right bitch, end early, worse pay and have a commute. Each of these on it's own would be reason enough to stay but all four together makes a slam dunk choice.
I think you stay where you are until you are pushed and then deal with the crap you don't want to deal with when you've no choice.
Going to office would be a change but I am sure it is just a minor inconvenience and getting used to it again.
I have received two emails last week (relevant & direct rather than generic ones) so I suppose it is all pointing to a better market, plus there is no harm in getting the resume ready and doing few interviews.Leave a comment:
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As a PM/Programme Mgr, your main skills are likely to be communication, managing expectations and some scrum master activities. Having a high level understanding of Cloud, DevOps helps. All of these are common in all projects, so no need to worry about 'How will it look in CV?'
If I were you, I would keep billing while trying to find ways to 'help' other project if my ego permits.Last edited by BigDataPro; 22 September 2021, 15:08.Leave a comment:
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