Originally posted by Boo
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Yawn.... this bench is bl00dy uncomfortable
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Originally posted by nomadd View PostI only ever get invites from Agents. Which I always refuse. Meaning I have zero contacts. Which bizarrely means I have no problems with LinkedIn any more. Win-win.
In case you weren't joking, you do know you need to go out and search for people you know, don't you
BooComment
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Originally posted by Boo;1295991
Leeches [Bare[/B] "the massive financial risk" for most contractors. Whether it's preposterous contract terms, or going bust, or imposing unnecessary intermediaries, or simply pocketing the clients' money and declining to pay. Most contractors' risk is the leech, not the client.
This only really applies to the small fry agencies - the chances of an SThree, Capita, or Ranstad going bust and not paying, are remote at best.
And that long list of unnecessary, invented makework you supplied only shows that the clients' reasons for using agencies are dubious at best and unseemly at worst : they have to do all of the agencies' work all over again when they get the CVs from the leech in any case.
Every penny you have earned is derivated from contractors who do the only useful portion of the work that the client pays for. Everything else is overhead form leech to umbrella to HR person.
Wrong. Every penny I have ever earned, has come from my ability to provide the sales and marketing element of your business. As with any organisation which provides sales outsource, this costs money - not to you, but oddly, the client. In reality, for providing you with Sales leads, we should be charging the contractor.
So think on that as you pick splinters from your *rse whilst mulling over the likely destination of the current boom in social networks like LinkedIn.Boo
Secondly, if you want to make an argument, you might want to think about it first. This morning I have had confirmation of two contracts which have been accepted by my contractors and will start Monday - total sale value £96,000 over three months - Profit Margin, £15,600. The Source? You guessed it - LinkedIn. So yes, I'm absolutely tuliping myself that LinkedIn could replace my in depth sales and negotiation skills immediately, and see me out of a job....."Being a permy is like being married, when there's no more sex on the cards....and she's got fat."
SlimRick
Can't argue with thatComment
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Every penny I have ever earned, has come from my ability to provide the sales and marketing element of your business. As with any organisation which provides sales outsource, this costs money - not to you, but oddly, the client. In reality, for providing you with Sales leads, we should be charging the contractor.Speaking gibberish on internet talkboards since last Michaelmas. Plus here on TwitterComment
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Originally posted by Boo View PostI assume from that you don't think LinkedIn is worth the effort ? I've been pretty assiduously cultivating contacts but it hasn't brought in any work yet. I see they have a new jobs vacant facility which is interesting and which brings clients directly into play - so far it's all been permanent work but I've still put my CV forward where relevant. I've high hopes of LinkedIn in the medium term - the current economic climate means clients will be looking to cut costs and LI is one way to do that.
In case you weren't joking, you do know you need to go out and search for people you know, don't you
Boo
Might look back into it next time I'm on the bench, I guess.
Still, I'll continue to ignore all the agent requests to be added to my "friends" (or is that Facebook? Don't use that either... ) At the end of the day, if an agent has a role and has found me on LinkedIn, they'll have no problem finding my contact details and picking up a phone to call. God knows, I've been registered with all of them for the last gazillion years.nomadd liked this postComment
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almost 6 mths on the bench for me.. still applying though but very broke now and exhausted warchest..Comment
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I used to enjoy this thread.
Can we start another thread on the same subject and leave these chaps to have their row. Or perhaps they could go on linkedin and have it there?Comment
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Originally posted by PropertyCrashUK View Post...leave these chaps to have their row. Or perhaps they could go on linkedin and have it there?
Brilliant idea.
Free Handbags for them at LinkedIn:
nomadd liked this postComment
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Originally posted by The Agents View View PostGet a business brain, and CREDIT CHECK your agents then
Originally posted by The Agents View View Postthe agent is - your client.
The agent is a leech, pure and simple. If you want to see that the agent is a leech then try asking one if they are happy to bill the client for their work while letting the contractor go direct with the client. They will refuse because the only way they can justify the sums they charge is by confusing the contractors' valuable output with the agencies' unjustifiable overhead and expense.
Originally posted by The Agents View View PostYou clearly work with or for small scale companies
Originally posted by The Agents View View Postsmaller companies will take contractors direct, and bigger ones will put a middleman in so that they can use the Teflon Shouldered approach.
Originally posted by The Agents View View PostWrong. Every penny I have ever earned, has come from my ability to provide the sales and marketing element of your business.
Originally posted by The Agents View View PostAs with any organisation which provides sales outsource, this costs money - not to you, but oddly, the client.
Originally posted by The Agents View View PostSecondly, if you want to make an argument, you might want to think about it first. This morning I have had confirmation of two contracts which have been accepted by my contractors and will start Monday - total sale value £96,000 over three months - Profit Margin, £15,600.
- 1 months advertising on Jobserve £250
- 4 hours of an HR bod's time to discard irrelevant CVs : £100
- 2 hours / month of a contract bookkeepers' time to process timesheets 2*3*£50 == £300
Total £650 per contractor == £1300 for the client to do the job in house. Max.
So the mark up on everything you do of value to the client is factor of 10, and the best you can do for the contractor is not go bust ? Thanks, mate but no thanks, mate.
Originally posted by The Agents View View PostThe Source? You guessed it - LinkedIn. So yes, I'm absolutely tuliping myself that LinkedIn could replace my in depth sales and negotiation skills immediately, and see me out of a job.....
The reason companies use leeches is kickbacks which go under various guises, like "referrals". Your days are numbered as legislation like the bribary act comes into force and hard times force even HR executives to put their company's interests first.
BooComment
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Originally posted by Boo View Post...the solution to agencies' theivery is to cut the agency out of the chain.
...The agent is a leech, pure and simple.
...More self-serving fabrication from the pen of the resident leech
...far less than the leech's stupendous and wholly unearned margin
...Utter codswallop. You perform no more marketing than a barrow boy does for an individual chestnut.
...Leeches do nothing to market enhanced skills or capabilities
...The fact that clients will do everything possible to avoid paying a leech tells you what you are worth : nothing.
..."in depth sales and negotiation skills" my fat hairy *rse.
...then lie through your nose to all and sundry
...if the leeches were not in the loop.
...leeches...kickbacks...Your days are numbered
Boo
In fairness, there are one or two good agents/agencies around. I've found that most of those tend to be on-site, embedded within a large client organisation, where they can't get away with dirty tactics. My last two contracts have been via agencies who have their own staff permanently on-site managing things. Both jobs have gone pretty well, and the agents have been on a smallish 8-10% margin due to the client giving them exclusivity.
Still, unfortunately, there are many around who fit your description. The only advice I can give is don't use them. I get quite a few who phone me up with "attitude", and I simply point out to them that they are just "one of several agencies working on the role, and I'd rather go via someone more professional" quickly puts them in their place.nomadd liked this postComment
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