Many of us have experienced the problem of not being put forward for roles due to not having commercial work experience with technologies, but being therefore unable to obtain that experience because we can't get the job.
Of course many of us have also got around this problem, as evidenced by many of us having developed our skills into new areas over the course of our contracting careers.
What I would like to know, is how in practice this has happened for you over the years?
I imagine there are five primary approaches:
1. You went perm.
2. You did a contract on the basis of an existing skill you had. And then over the course of the contract other unforseen tasks came up with different skills that the client allowed you to work on, allowing you to gain experience in those new skills.
3. You applied for a contract that required some or all skills where you didn't have the experience. You said this to the agent/client but they hired you anyway.
4. You applied for a contract that required some or all skills where you didn't have the experience. The client/agent didn't ask you whether you had the experience, or you fudged an answer that didn't address the point, but they hired you anyway.
5. You applied for a contract that required some or all skills where you did't have the experience. You were dishonest, and said you did have the experience.
The reason I ask is that I am looking to up-skill, having fallen behind somewhat, and I want to do it in a way that other folks have found works.
Thanks
Of course many of us have also got around this problem, as evidenced by many of us having developed our skills into new areas over the course of our contracting careers.
What I would like to know, is how in practice this has happened for you over the years?
I imagine there are five primary approaches:
1. You went perm.
2. You did a contract on the basis of an existing skill you had. And then over the course of the contract other unforseen tasks came up with different skills that the client allowed you to work on, allowing you to gain experience in those new skills.
3. You applied for a contract that required some or all skills where you didn't have the experience. You said this to the agent/client but they hired you anyway.
4. You applied for a contract that required some or all skills where you didn't have the experience. The client/agent didn't ask you whether you had the experience, or you fudged an answer that didn't address the point, but they hired you anyway.
5. You applied for a contract that required some or all skills where you did't have the experience. You were dishonest, and said you did have the experience.
The reason I ask is that I am looking to up-skill, having fallen behind somewhat, and I want to do it in a way that other folks have found works.
Thanks
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