Originally posted by NotAllThere
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contract terminated, dealing with reference?
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Yep..there is a anonymous HMRC number you can call if you suspect someone is not paying their "fair" share. -
Nice and easy for you - 0800 788 887 (Lines are open Monday to Friday 8am to 8pm, Saturday and Sunday 8am to 4pm)"You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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I am a small start-up, I cannot match with the mighty client. So, I wanted to just move on, and try for other contracts.Originally posted by Mailman View PostIf you are a business why arent you sueing them for breach of contract??
Wont your shareholders be up in arms over this?
Mailman
It appears that with one sided contracts having notice of termination available only to the client and not to the consultant, if the situation goes bad, it almost always have to end up as termination by the client. Painful, but a fact, because the client wants to keep that option, and not to provide the notice option to the consultant.Comment
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This client does not have many permies, most appear to be contractors.Originally posted by sathyaram_s View PostIMHO, this approach lead to unnecessary confusions ...
Give an excuse (like, the manager is on holiday now) for not giving reference from this company ... If you have no option, then you can give a permie as a reference (of course, with their consent) ..
I have listed the assignment in my resume. I find that I cannot avoid mentioning about the client.
The recruiter told that the client, as per their policy, does not provide references anyway. If someone asks for references, the recruiter told he would confirm the dates of assignment. Will this be OK for me to move on?
So, how important the references are, can the absence of a reference or a bad reference ruin one's career?Comment
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I'm very rarely asked for references - certainly not as a "I need someone at your last place of work". You should never need more than two references anyway, which you should be able to pick - for example if this job was as a C# developer, and the one before that was Java struts, if the next one is Java then you'd want to give the most appropriate reference for the job.Originally posted by affected View PostThis client does not have many permies, most appear to be contractors.
I have listed the assignment in my resume. I find that I cannot avoid mentioning about the client.
The recruiter told that the client, as per their policy, does not provide references anyway. If someone asks for references, the recruiter told he would confirm the dates of assignment. Will this be OK for me to move on?
So, how important the references are, can the absence of a reference or a bad reference ruin one's career?
A reference (or absence thereof) should really not make that much difference anyway.Comment
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You were there for 12 months. I'd say that's a pretty good reference as if you were rubbish you'd have been out of the door a lot sooner.Originally posted by affected View PostSo, how important the references are, can the absence of a reference or a bad reference ruin one's career?+50 Xeno Geek Points
Come back Toolpusher, scotspine, Voodooflux.Pogle
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Purveyor of fine quality smut since 2005
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Very good point.Originally posted by Zippy View PostYou were there for 12 months. I'd say that's a pretty good reference as if you were rubbish you'd have been out of the door a lot sooner.
I would tend to agree. Just list the contract in your profile and don't worry about the references. Move on now.Comment
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On your CV describe the job as '12 month assignment including 3 contract extensions' etc etc, and then when asked for references say this client will not provide them and offer an alternative from another client. For the majority of contracts the reference process is informal to non existent in my experience and certainly nothing to lose sleep over.Originally posted by Zippy View PostYou were there for 12 months. I'd say that's a pretty good reference as if you were rubbish you'd have been out of the door a lot sooner.Comment
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max, not all there, sue ellen - not very nice. What are you, permies or something?Originally posted by max View PostYep..there is a anonymous HMRC number you can call if you suspect someone is not paying their "fair" share.Comment
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