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Agency and 3 month contract

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    #11
    Originally posted by bobsp View Post
    Well finally got there, and they have paid me for the week' notice.
    Oh, well done!

    Do you have a partner? Has (s)he supported you through this? If so, spend ALL of that week's money (post-tax, of course) on them on a frivolous gift. That will repay you in the future when the next thing goes bad. If you have no partner and dealt with that problem on your own, treat yourself to something, like one of those special day out event treats. You did really well getting that money and it is a windfall - blow it on something nice and pointless. Do NOT waste it on Xmas presents on family. That's not why we contract - we do it for luxuries.

    Originally posted by Lolas Cat View Post
    I'm not a very experienced contractor/permie but I would never ever start working for someone without accepting the terms and signing a contract first. I think it's pretty much common sense.
    That is so easy to say, and so hard to do. For my first contract the interview was at 3pm; I was called at 6pm by the agent and asked to start at 9 a.m. the next day so I could have a one day handover. I was in that contract for 5 years and it became the highest rate contract I've ever had. If I had said I wanted to wait to check the contract paperwork, they would have given the gig to the first person who volunteered to start at 9 a.m.

    I agree. You should not start without seeing and checking the contract. But sometimes life gets in the way.
    Last edited by RichardCranium; 2 December 2010, 23:31. Reason: Hindsight is so cheap, plentiful, accurate and pointless.
    My all-time favourite Dilbert cartoon, this is: BTW, a Dumpster is a brand of skip, I think.

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      #12
      Originally posted by RichardCranium View Post
      For my first contract the interview was at 3pm; I was called at 6pm by the agent and asked to start at 9 a.m. the next day so I could have a one day handover. I was in that contract for 5 years and it became the highest rate contract I've ever had. If I had said I wanted to wait to check the contract paperwork, they would have given the gig to the first person who volunteered to start at 9 a.m.

      I agree. You should not start without seeing and checking the contract. But sometimes life gets in the way.
      Fair comment, there is often pressure like this and we are useless if not flexible.

      However, it doesn't take you (or them!) more than 10 minutes to knock out a letter of intent outlining the terms which will subject to agreement of a written contract. It's good business sense and it's easy. Here's the script:

      Contractor: OK, I accept your offer what are the terms
      Agent: Excellent. That's great news, waffle waffle waffle. Ahh, don't worry about terms, we'll discuss them later
      Contractor: No, we will agree this now it will only take a minute. How about X amount per day, invoice weekly, payment within 14 days, 1 week's notice from either side and subject to agreement of a written contract that is acceptable to my LTD
      Agent: Sounds OK, subject to a agreement of a written contract of course!
      Contractor: OK, I'll confirm that in a letter of intent (by email) in a few minutes. Let me know if the details in the letter are OK and then I'll start straight away.
      Agent: Don't wait for confirmation, just start.
      Contractor: I'll send the email now and call you back to confirm that you have it and are happy with it. Once you confirm, I will start right away.

      Put the pressure back on the agent. Is he going to annoy the client by not banging out the paperwork in time and not getting someone on site? No I didn't think so.

      The good thing about a letter of intent is that you can then do due diligence on a contract at your leisure, you're not pressured into signing a contract without reading it or getting it reviewed.
      Free advice and opinions - refunds are available if you are not 100% satisfied.

      Comment


        #13
        Originally posted by bobsp View Post
        Well finally got there, and they have paid me for the weeks notice. Sent a letter in October, and they responded on the last day, more phone calls etc, and today they have issued the payment for the full weeks notice. (They still would not give me a copy of the contract though) I got Employment Agency Standatds involved who are investigating them now......

        I have learned my lesson, and I hope they have.
        I believe you should write to the client and make the client aware of the mistakes the agency made adn how this affected the delivery of the contract. It shouldn't reflect poorly on yourself in front of the client because the agency was basically lazy and rubbish (not unusual in this game). At the end of the day, your professional reputation is what you trade on and you don't want a bad rep with any client, and often agencies and their mistakes make it all the more difficult for you.

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          #14
          Well finally got there, and they have paid me for the weeks notice. Sent a letter in October, and they responded on the last day, more phone calls etc, and today they have issued the payment for the full weeks notice. (They still would not give me a copy of the contract though) I got Employment Agency Standatds involved who are investigating them now......
          Good on you! Let us know how the investigation by Employment Agency Standards works out.

          What about the client in all of this? Surely there is a possibility of writing to someone at the client's end - a department that can be complained to?

          Getting sick and tired of contractors being treated badly - and reading a lot of advice on this forum it doesn't seem like many contractors think they deserve any better, as if its par for the course.

          Comment


            #15
            Originally posted by bobsp View Post
            I got Employment Agency Standatds involved who are investigating them now......
            You know, I have a feeling that they will just find that there was a single rogue employee working at the otherwise reputable agent and he has been given a severe reprimand and sent away for reprogramming.

            Let us know if you hear anything more about it though!
            Free advice and opinions - refunds are available if you are not 100% satisfied.

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by Wanderer View Post
              Fair comment, there is often pressure like this and we are useless if not flexible.

              However, it doesn't take you (or them!) more than 10 minutes to knock out a letter of intent outlining the terms which will subject to agreement of a written contract. It's good business sense and it's easy. Here's the script:

              Contractor: OK, I accept your offer what are the terms
              Agent: Excellent. That's great news, waffle waffle waffle. Ahh, don't worry about terms, we'll discuss them later
              Contractor: No, we will agree this now it will only take a minute. How about X amount per day, invoice weekly, payment within 14 days, 1 week's notice from either side and subject to agreement of a written contract that is acceptable to my LTD
              Agent: Sounds OK, subject to a agreement of a written contract of course!
              Contractor: OK, I'll confirm that in a letter of intent (by email) in a few minutes. Let me know if the details in the letter are OK and then I'll start straight away.
              Agent: Don't wait for confirmation, just start.
              Contractor: I'll send the email now and call you back to confirm that you have it and are happy with it. Once you confirm, I will start right away.

              Put the pressure back on the agent. Is he going to annoy the client by not banging out the paperwork in time and not getting someone on site? No I didn't think so.

              The good thing about a letter of intent is that you can then do due diligence on a contract at your leisure, you're not pressured into signing a contract without reading it or getting it reviewed.
              This is true.

              I've had an agency put a contract offer on the table and want a next day start. But I've made it fairly clear that I'd need a contract in place to move the work forward, not only from a satisfaction point of view but a legal one as well. Your insurer may not cover you in some situations if no contract exists so you have to be careful. Even if the agency wants to move quickly, they should have a template contract you can read before the real one is signed.

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by RichardCranium View Post

                That is so easy to say, and so hard to do. For my first contract the interview was at 3pm; I was called at 6pm by the agent and asked to start at 9 a.m. the next day so I could have a one day handover. I was in that contract for 5 years and it became the highest rate contract I've ever had. If I had said I wanted to wait to check the contract paperwork, they would have given the gig to the first person who volunteered to start at 9 a.m.

                I agree. You should not start without seeing and checking the contract. But sometimes life gets in the way.
                It's called email, a printer and a fax machine.

                I found them all useful in all of my contracts so far to varying degrees particularly when the client wants you to start the next day or two.

                Though it does help if you have companies/agencies who are use to dealing with contractors and use basically a PCG contract.
                "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

                Comment

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