Good to see another person asking the same kind of question as I did
It's entertaining reading the pstaking by some of them, especially those like malvolio who say
when he/she's the one that can't see perm is only 5 days a week
However daft I sound , here's what I thought before coming on this forum and I'm still not totally covinced that it's wrong
The contracts I would go into have been in good supply even during this recession. A sign of this is the fact that when they were first being recruited for, they asked for a specific professional qualification. Then a few months later the same client was using the same agency and now highlighting that they no longer insist you have the qualification and yet the same daily rate.
This is and the other contracts advertised made me think there'd be a good supply of work for the best part of the next 12 months.
And
When people here are talking about warchests or spending ages on the bench
The way I'd look at the calculations is:
Get a contract, earn £250/day, even if it ends after 3 months, you've earned nearly 9 months worth of perm money in 3 months
While looking for the next contract, just take on a temp job paying a sht £7/hour , £49/day
Yes, you won't be a true hardcore contractor if you do this, and so probably wouldn't be able to do the tax dodging IR35 tricks. Instead use an umbrella, less take home pay but less hassle and still better off overall than perming
Right - I'm ready for a load of stick
It's entertaining reading the pstaking by some of them, especially those like malvolio who say
Stay perm, you're not good enough to go contracting
However daft I sound , here's what I thought before coming on this forum and I'm still not totally covinced that it's wrong
The contracts I would go into have been in good supply even during this recession. A sign of this is the fact that when they were first being recruited for, they asked for a specific professional qualification. Then a few months later the same client was using the same agency and now highlighting that they no longer insist you have the qualification and yet the same daily rate.
This is and the other contracts advertised made me think there'd be a good supply of work for the best part of the next 12 months.
And
When people here are talking about warchests or spending ages on the bench
The way I'd look at the calculations is:
Get a contract, earn £250/day, even if it ends after 3 months, you've earned nearly 9 months worth of perm money in 3 months
While looking for the next contract, just take on a temp job paying a sht £7/hour , £49/day
Yes, you won't be a true hardcore contractor if you do this, and so probably wouldn't be able to do the tax dodging IR35 tricks. Instead use an umbrella, less take home pay but less hassle and still better off overall than perming
Right - I'm ready for a load of stick
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