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torn apart between perm/contract options

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    #21
    thanks guys, really appreciate your comments/feedback.

    some of the questions that have been asked as part of the feedback.

    - i am based in london.
    - part reason of why i managed to get this is possibly because i got good recco, branding etc.
    - part coz i would be responsible for putting agile development in process.

    i am kinda convinced that this is going to be the way forward, will be accepting the offer tomorrow and see where it goes from there.
    will work on other skillsets (based on what jobserve has to say) and then re-evaluate my self where i stand.

    would be great if anyone else had any additional words of wisdom for me

    Comment


      #22
      I've had a couple of calls for PHP roles over the past month and a bit and they have ranged from £120-£150/day. Good luck finding somebody who will pay you £400/day.....
      here is a link that is worth looking at:

      http://www.itjobswatch.co.uk/contracts/uk/php.do

      Take a look at the percentage reduction in rate in the past year and pay particular attention to the hourly rates (a daily rate may be for a 12 hour day in some cases so it isn't always a rosy as it looks)

      Finally, you really aren't cut out for contracting. This information took me all of about 30 seconds to search for and find. If you can't do it yourself and just expect answers to be handed to you on a plate you will fail at contracting.

      So in summary:

      Ignore the negative comments, come contracting you'll make a bomb!!

      (I'll be walking down that alley near your house to laugh my arse at you when you're homeless in 6 months time though)

      Comment


        #23
        thanks @Ardesco, i appreciate your comment, i do see that most jobs are < £200 at times, but also occasionally you do see ads which say £300-£400, having said that i am not arguing the realty that the market is bad, which is why i am here and want to know were the market actually is as you are having to deal with it while youa re in it.

        most of my friends with similar skillsets are in contracts which is on at the moment so they are not looking (which is why i didnt see the point in asking) and which is why i am asking for clarifications.

        appreciate your spending time for finding me pointers, its all a learning experience for me.

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by expat View Post
          I second this, XLMonkey's calculations and real-life numbers are much better than the back of my envelope.


          May I make an observation? I had previously spent 20+ years contracting. That gave me a huge choice about how I dispatched that income. With the economy I lived in during that time I coined it. I'm arguably fortunate in that I have a 7 figure set of free asset (though there is an argument that having a 200k mortgate 20 years ago and no income was worrying). But a 50k with good benefits permie job for the last five 5 years has given me a very easy life. At the moment the contract rate I could get would not compensate. So what does it mean? Time, commitment to your own belief and ability to change when needed. I may well go back to contracting, but at the moment there is no chance it can work for me. If you can secure a 47k role, you would - in my view - nedd a damn good reason to turn it down. You mat, of course, have one.

          Time. and luck, are a great thing for personal wealth. The chances of it happning it again soon are, I think, close to nil.

          Comment


            #25
            Originally posted by ASB View Post
            Time. and luck, are a great thing for personal wealth. The chances of it happning it again soon are, I think, close to nil.
            That is an excellent point. Nothing is better for your wealth than being lucky and knowing when to seize your good luck. Without knowing your circumstances, I'd guess that (as described) the £47k job is a piece of good luck in the current environment.

            Comment


              #26
              I'm relatively new to contracting this time round too. I used to be a fairly long termer but then spent 6 years as a permie until the threat of redundancy prompted me to take voluntary (and the enhanced package on offer) back at the end of February. I'm thanking my lucky stars I'm working because it has been very stresseful since I left that role. I managed to get myself an initial 3 week contract in March that has now been extended all the way until Xmas. Clearly I'm very happy about this but in the mean time I've been keeping my toe dipped 'in the permie pool' so to speak. The current market (or lack of) and the let's face it "tulip" that we are having to go through from many of the pimps, means that if the interview that I went to yesterday for another permie role comes off by this Friday I shall be taking it and quitting this contract.

              If I'd got a $ for every time a pimp had told me that his client wants to take me on but his project has just been canned I'd retire tomorrow.

              The market is just too down for my liking. Maybe that's because I've become softened by my years as a permie, I strongly suspect that it is.

              My two peneth to the OP....47k is a decent salary in the current climate and if it was me I'd snap their hands off right now.
              Signatures.....what's the point?

              Comment


                #27
                thanks guys! i will be signing up the contract later today!, i am still interested in knowing what sort of skills are in demand in web development, this thread has made me feel that the niche framework skills i had arnt good enough to get a decent contract.
                would be great to know more about the additional skillsets that can enhance my chances in the php/java development area.

                Comment


                  #28
                  and?

                  did you take the full-time option, or did you decide to make the leap into the rarified world of contracting, where every day's a holiday, every paypacket a fortune, all the permies bow down and worship your superior knowledge, tax is optional, and woman look at you with the same awe they normally reserve for Formula 1 drivers and professional football players?*

                  *your experience my differ from that advertised

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Spoke to an ex permie colleague who left to take some time off (this was last year) and now wants to get into contracting.

                    When he left, contract rates in London were around 350-400 pd.

                    He says that he can find some contracts, but that they are only offering around 200pd, so clearly "down on the market rate".

                    I had to point out to him that actually, it is the market rate as it stands at the moment.

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Originally posted by ukblokester View Post
                      i will be signing up the contract later today!
                      That's great.

                      For the benefit of the morale of us still on the bench, could you cheer us up with some good news?

                      - what's your day rate?
                      - is it private or public sector?
                      - is it using your php skills or something else?

                      Just so we can get some proper feedback about the state of the market from someone who knows.

                      Thanks in advance.
                      Drivelling in TPD is not a mental health issue. We're just community blogging, that's all.

                      Xenophon said: "CUK Geek of the Week". A gingerjedi certified "Elitist Tw@t". Posting rated @ 5 lard points

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