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"Can you work a bit longer please."

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    #21
    Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
    Your professional day is 8 hours.

    Working 9 hours consistently (unless you waste an equivalent of an hour or more a day doing your own business whether that be web surfing, training or talking on the phone) is giving them 5 hours free a week or 2.5 days of your time for free a month.

    Think of what else you could do with those hours as even if you are stuck in a hotel you could do an open university module with that time.
    I couldn't agree more and that's exactly what I'm doing now. I'm always surprised by the number of people on here who say to keep working for more hours per day than the contract. I'm not a clock watcher but there's no way I'd work 9-10 hours per day if the contract states 8. As for the "Professional Working Day", this should be clearly defined in the contract so all sides know exactly what they are working to.

    SueEllen's point about giving 2.5 days per month is a really good one. It's scary to think that over the course of a 6 month contract this equates to 3 working weeks!

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      #22
      Originally posted by ShandyDrinker View Post
      I couldn't agree more and that's exactly what I'm doing now. I'm always surprised by the number of people on here who say to keep working for more hours per day than the contract. I'm not a clock watcher but there's no way I'd work 9-10 hours per day if the contract states 8. As for the "Professional Working Day", this should be clearly defined in the contract so all sides know exactly what they are working to.

      SueEllen's point about giving 2.5 days per month is a really good one. It's scary to think that over the course of a 6 month contract this equates to 3 working weeks!
      There was a time pre Y2K that most of us got paid by the hour for every hour then lots of newbie contractors started accepting daily rates from agents that still wanted all hours worked on the timesheet so the agents could claim hourly but pay contractors daily Alas, it has all ended with daily rates and no overtime - nobody wins now.

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        #23
        I've had a very busy month, on the last month of my current contract. I've been expected to be on call pretty much 24/7 and work weekends including some super shifts of over 20 hours. The fatal flaw that I've made was not to negotiate overtime beforehand, something I will learn from in the future. Funnily, in this very contractor heavy team, no one seems to have had the balls to take this to a very over-bearing PM.

        I've therefore submitted my timesheet with a covering letter stating where and why I've charged overtime i.e where the day was over 12 hours - 1.5 days charged, where it was 20 hours - 2 days charged etc. On the whole I'm still giving away a lot of time but if i attempted to bill every hour over 8 then I think the clientco would have a fit.

        Anyway, I await with interest as to their reaction, worse case is I get stiffed and I live and learn, best case they realise its small beer compared to the consultancies that have a proper contract and will not only be charging every hour but being charging multiples for unsociable hours.
        Anti-bedwetting advice

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          #24
          Originally posted by configman View Post
          If you work in one of those offices where they track your calls you will soon find out that the bobs are using other poeples phones to make long distance calls after hours. Lock your phone if you can.
          One client site I worked at blocked 0800 numbers as well as 0845 and 0870 numbers because the bobs where using calling cards on the office phones. They then made all contractors on the floor the bobs where on share one phone between 4 as they still spent all day on the phone.
          "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

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            #25
            Originally posted by configman View Post
            There was a time pre Y2K that most of us got paid by the hour for every hour then lots of newbie contractors started accepting daily rates from agents that still wanted all hours worked on the timesheet so the agents could claim hourly but pay contractors daily Alas, it has all ended with daily rates and no overtime - nobody wins now.
            Some clients still do hourly rates but cap it at a number of hours per month.

            This annoyed my last agent as it looked like I was doing more than my allocated hours per month when in fact I was doing other business on the client site. The PM didn't mind as long as I did the work I said I would do in time.
            "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

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              #26
              Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
              Some clients still do hourly rates but cap it at a number of hours per month.

              This annoyed my last agent as it looked like I was doing more than my allocated hours per month when in fact I was doing other business on the client site. The PM didn't mind as long as I did the work I said I would do in time.
              Where I work now it is standard practice to pay 15 months for every 12 months to compensate. You automatically without condition get tax free 3 months for completion of each year.

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                #27
                Originally posted by Scrag Meister View Post
                Just had one of the Middle Office managers that I work with, nice bloke, ask me if I can put some more hours in as we have a high workload at the moment.

                He isn't the person who approves my timesheets.

                My contracts says my rate is "per professional day" and elsewhere implies this is counted as an 8 hour day, and that there is no overtime payable.

                I'm on average doing about 9 hours a day already.

                What would you do?

                Asking my approving manager to sign off a few additional days has been muted as an option.
                I would work the extra hours and tell them ill be taking a day off paid when I've accrued 8 hours OT, literally had the same thing recently where i was doing sometimes over 12 hours a day - they were more than happy for me to take a day off when the dust settled and pay me for it
                sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice - Asimov (sort of)

                there is no art in a factory, not even in an art factory - Mixerman

                everyone is stupid some of the time - trad.

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                  #28
                  Swings and roundabouts. I have had gigs where the client was happy to pay for you to work as many as hours as you liked ie 70+ hours per week. As for expecting you to do it and not offering to pay, time off in lieu then it risks becoming the norm. Tell him him to feck #ff.

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                    #29
                    Originally posted by weemster View Post
                    Swings and roundabouts. I have had gigs where the client was happy to pay for you to work as many as hours as you liked ie 70+ hours per week. As for expecting you to do it and not offering to pay, time off in lieu then it risks becoming the norm.
                    Some of the stuff I do has to be done outside normal working hours (installing new hardware etc), so I bring the subject up at interview time.

                    Places on a strict budget will usually accept time off in lieu, others are a lot more generous in the amount of overtime you can clock up.

                    Time off in lieu is great for fitting in appointments with dentists, accountants etc.
                    Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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