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Dilemma – I welcome advice

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    Dilemma – I welcome advice

    Hello All,
    First time poster – been contracting for a year, about to start my third in London.

    I have been offered Job A. I have an interview for Job B tomorrow. I would much prefer Job B for a number of reasons, but of course its just an interview, not an offer.

    Job A wants me to start early next week. I might not hear back from Job B until mid next week. Last contract ended a couple of months ago, so I really want to get back into it and can’t afford to risk not taking Job A.

    My question is, should I start Job A and quit after a week (if that’s my notice period) to take my preferred Job B (if offered, of course)

    Sorry for the convoluted question. Just don’t know the etiquette of quitting/moving.

    Thanks all!

    #2
    Don't take A with the aim to quitting in a week. Thats very bad.

    I'd leave things as late as I could with possible chance you may be left with nothing.

    Safe bet, take Job A, risky bet, wait for B and time things wrong and end up with nothing.

    Simple as that I would imagine.

    TM

    Comment


      #3
      How long is job A for? How long is job B for?

      Comment


        #4
        As well as what's been said above, I would be honest with Job B and tell them you have an offer to start ASAP and hence need to know within a couple of days whether or not they want you.

        The client will admire your honestly and also see that you are in-demand.

        Comment


          #5
          You have to get into business mode and start thinking of the needs of your customers. Be professional. I know other disagree with me and say follow the money.
          If you take a contract be determined to finish it no matter what.
          Consider how you would feel if you had agreed a contract with a builder for example and after two weeks they buggered off.

          If you develope a reputation as unreliable you may struggle to get work at a later date. That does somewhat depend on your arena and skill set.
          I am not qualified to give the above advice!

          The original point and click interface by
          Smith and Wesson.

          Step back, have a think and adjust my own own attitude from time to time

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by The Lone Gunman View Post
            You have to get into business mode and start thinking of the needs of your customers. Be professional. I know other disagree with me and say follow the money.
            If you take a contract be determined to finish it no matter what.
            Consider how you would feel if you had agreed a contract with a builder for example and after two weeks they buggered off.

            If you develope a reputation as unreliable you may struggle to get work at a later date. That does somewhat depend on your arena and skill set.
            I agree!
            Last edited by Integrity; 6 June 2008, 11:54.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by The Lone Gunman View Post
              You have to get into business mode and start thinking of the needs of your customers. Be professional. I know other disagree with me and say follow the money.
              If you take a contract be determined to finish it no matter what.
              Consider how you would feel if you had agreed a contract with a builder for example and after two weeks they buggered off.

              If you develope a reputation as unreliable you may struggle to get work at a later date. That does somewhat depend on your arena and skill set.
              I totaly agree with LG. I've been in this situation a few times and the answer for me has always been the professional one. If you agree to Job A then stick with that decision. If you try to play devils advocate you are likely to end up loosing both.

              Consider your situation, make a decision and stick to it.

              Comment


                #8
                Thanks for the opinions!

                Hi all,
                A decision has been made. Job B made me an offer a couple of hours after the interview. I have accepted Job B and declined Job A.
                I know I had a verbal agreement with Job A but I never signed a contract. I do feel bad and maybe shouldn’t have accepted Job A in the first place, but B came at a really fast pace late on. The money was the same, so it wasn’t a financial decision, but B really will be the best option.
                Agent for A accused me of being unprofessional though. Feel bad but happy I got the job I was after.

                Thanks for all your opinions. Might have to avoid applying for jobs with that agent next time, do you think?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by TazMaN View Post
                  As well as what's been said above, I would be honest with Job B and tell them you have an offer to start ASAP and hence need to know within a couple of days whether or not they want you.

                  The client will admire your honestly and also see that you are in-demand.
                  WHS

                  Comment


                    #10
                    you could take A, ask B if you can do it in three months. (A sort of back to back AB, like an ABBA)






                    (\__/)
                    (>'.'<)
                    ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

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