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Trying to get into Contract Notice Period and Holiday entitlement
Like i said earlier i don't think your ready for this, you have spent the morning discussing whether you can take your holiday as notice period, you can keep discussing it untill your blue in the face if you are going contracting just go into your boss and tell him straight your off can you sort out when i can go and i want to take any holiday as part of my notice, make a decision and go and do it
Dont agree with the "Not ready" part . But you are right about Just go for it. and thats what I am going to do. It was not quesiton of if I am contracting it was just about how to deal with the situation at hand. for which I got good feedback from this thread
sorry I dont think I put that right... I didnt work extra day then 4 weeks but I had 3 weeks worth of holidays left. So If I could decide then could have taken all three weeks and left with in a week.
You're English typing skills are terrible, I don't know whether English is your second language or not, so it is hard to decipher that.
pmeswami is correct. Sorry if the language does not make sense.
You really have bad English - in one of the posts quoted you started talking about "employers" when the poster were talking about "employees". Either take some more English lessons in your spare time or read more English literature books. It will really help.
I've had some interviews where they have done English tests on me i.e. please write a paragraph on x and y, and I couldn't work out why. Now I know.
"You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR
Many employers don't force leavers to work their notice anyway, or all of it. If you tell them you're leaving for a better offer they might let you do this, or even let you quit your notice without paying you for it.
You really have bad English - in one of the posts quoted you started talking about "employers" when the poster were talking about "employees". Either take some more English lessons in your spare time or read more English literature books. It will really help.
I've had some interviews where they have done English tests on me i.e. please write a paragraph on x and y, and I couldn't work out why. Now I know.
Thanks for the suggestion.
"I've had some interviews where they have done English tests on me i.e. please write a paragraph on x and y, and I couldn't work out why. Now I know." -- there is no need for this kind of talk. There could be number of reasons why someone would be ask to take a language tests. It is very narrrow minded thinking if you judge some's language ability just from this one thread. There could be number reasons why I got my language incorrect on this thread.
The post was polite and straightforward acontractor.
"I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
- Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...
I am thinking of getting into the contracting for a while now. I am currently fulltime employment.
As for many people who goes from perm to contract I have 4 weeks notice period. In my situation I have about > 2 weeks worth holidays left.
What I would like to do is considering I have a contract offer and the prospected employer wishes to wait for 2 weeks. I would like to hand my
notice for 4 weeks and negociate my pending holiday entitlement for the end of my notice period. Leaving me with 2 weeks notice period. Has anyone
successfully/unsccessfully tried this? Can my employer forces me to take the holiday as paid salary and denies me the two weeks worth of holidays?
KR
A perfectly valid question from a permie to contract situation point of view. The answer is, this depends on your company and your position in the company.
If you were a non entity you can easily negotiate an early departure using your holiday. This means they will not pay your unused holidays.
If you were a super important sort of guy in the company, they will want to have you for 4 weeks to make sure you have transferred all your knowledge.
If you were at director level, they will put you on garden leave to make sure you do not steal product ideas when you were in notice period.
It is usually safer to serve notice as per contract and so secure references. Never burn the bridge. Ask nicely and if they say no, do not persist.
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