3 Months on the bench and I've never seen it so quiet in terms of active roles to apply for. I don't think I buy this quiet period running up to Christmas thing, I've often landed roles in December, ditto August & I think I need to look at my skillset.
A few years ago I was what you would call a full stack .Net developer - rates weren't great, work was boring (endless config files etc) & I felt I was 2 a penny so engineered my way into being purely front end - JS frameworks like Vue & Angular. And it paid dividends for a while because there was a shortage of people who were wholly conversant with front end technology. A lot of people whose roles involved say 10% of their time on the front end but few that really knew their onions & I never really found myself short of work and rates were good too. Even during the worst of the pandemic I managed to land a couple of roles.
I feel there has been some kind of sea change & it could be one or more of several things. Firstly, I don't think the UI work was quite so offshorable as the bog standard .net stuff - as it involved more interaction with other parties. Thanks to the pandemic and WFH, I think this has shown that you can do all this stuff remotely wherever you are in the world and consequently the work is getting shipped overseas more than before. In fact, my last project was still fully active but they cited budget costs and replaced their UK based contractors with bods from a consultancy. The other thing is the economy but there are proportionately far more .net roles out there compared to JS roles so I don't think this is the prime driver for the dearth of contracts.
Of course, I'm now in the situation where I'm applying for fullstack .net roles but I haven't really touched it in anger for 5 years, even though it was my core skill for the previous 10 years and ,as a result, nobody is biting. So I this leaves me in a bit of a quandary - either get au fait with some back end technologies and blag my server side skills on my cv (because even in the pure FE roles there has been some back end awareness, be it Node, .Net Core or Ruby), wait for the JS market to pick up, go perm (which I would hate) or cash in and do something completely different before I've frittered away all my savings. I'm getting on a bit now and the last couple of years have kind of indicated that contracting isn't really supportable with all the downtime between roles and the volatility in the market.
Just wondering if anyone else is at a similar juncture....
A few years ago I was what you would call a full stack .Net developer - rates weren't great, work was boring (endless config files etc) & I felt I was 2 a penny so engineered my way into being purely front end - JS frameworks like Vue & Angular. And it paid dividends for a while because there was a shortage of people who were wholly conversant with front end technology. A lot of people whose roles involved say 10% of their time on the front end but few that really knew their onions & I never really found myself short of work and rates were good too. Even during the worst of the pandemic I managed to land a couple of roles.
I feel there has been some kind of sea change & it could be one or more of several things. Firstly, I don't think the UI work was quite so offshorable as the bog standard .net stuff - as it involved more interaction with other parties. Thanks to the pandemic and WFH, I think this has shown that you can do all this stuff remotely wherever you are in the world and consequently the work is getting shipped overseas more than before. In fact, my last project was still fully active but they cited budget costs and replaced their UK based contractors with bods from a consultancy. The other thing is the economy but there are proportionately far more .net roles out there compared to JS roles so I don't think this is the prime driver for the dearth of contracts.
Of course, I'm now in the situation where I'm applying for fullstack .net roles but I haven't really touched it in anger for 5 years, even though it was my core skill for the previous 10 years and ,as a result, nobody is biting. So I this leaves me in a bit of a quandary - either get au fait with some back end technologies and blag my server side skills on my cv (because even in the pure FE roles there has been some back end awareness, be it Node, .Net Core or Ruby), wait for the JS market to pick up, go perm (which I would hate) or cash in and do something completely different before I've frittered away all my savings. I'm getting on a bit now and the last couple of years have kind of indicated that contracting isn't really supportable with all the downtime between roles and the volatility in the market.
Just wondering if anyone else is at a similar juncture....
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