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First week of perm job and offered a contract...

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    First week of perm job and offered a contract...

    Contract is much more than i'm used to but is in reading (4 hours drive).
    Work from home 2 days a week after an initial 3 weeks on site
    Perm job is a great salary and is only 55 mins from home.

    Contract was offered based on a recommendation and a short chat on the phone

    Struggling to decide what to do...any thoughts would be appreciated.
    Your friendly neighbourhood VirtualMonkey - Not giving financial advice since...well...ever.

    #2
    What to do

    Originally posted by VirtualMonkey View Post
    Contract is much more than i'm used to but is in reading (4 hours drive).
    Work from home 2 days a week after an initial 3 weeks on site
    Perm job is a great salary and is only 55 mins from home.

    Contract was offered based on a recommendation and a short chat on the phone

    Struggling to decide what to do...any thoughts would be appreciated.
    Stay in the perm job.

    Exercise your substitution clause and send me - it's a 0 hr drive for me to Reading

    Comment


      #3
      Asking a board full of strangers to make a decision on your life and but give them next to no information to work with. Proper good idea that is.

      We can't even begin to compare the two for you as they are utterly different and you take each on of them for completely different reasons, reasons which you have omitted to tell us.

      Pointless question that will just confuse you even further with random answers from us.

      Stay perm, sounds like it would suit you better.
      'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

      Comment


        #4
        What would your missus say?
        "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...

        Comment


          #5
          she's okay with it...says she is anyway. I think the chance of a great summer holiday based on the money might sway her.
          i'm a family man really but the two days a week from home means i'd actually spend more time with them than a close perm job.

          Thanks for the comments NLUK succinct and understated as always.....
          I take your points though
          Your friendly neighbourhood VirtualMonkey - Not giving financial advice since...well...ever.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by VirtualMonkey View Post
            she's okay with it...says she is anyway. I think the chance of a great summer holiday based on the money might sway her.
            i'm a family man really but the two days a week from home means i'd actually spend more time with them than a close perm job.
            That assumes that the two days from home actually materialize. If they don't, then you are significantly worse off.

            Assuming you take the contract, what happens at the end of it? If the next contract is more than 55 minutes away, and has no working from home (hardly an unrealistic assumption), then from the end of this role, you'll be worse off in terms of family time.

            Assume that your next contract is going to be away from home, so no family time during the week. Would you look to take longer holidays to make up for that? It's what I do - there isn't a decent enough permie role near home, so I'll deal with the weekly tears when I leave, knowing that I'll take plenty of holiday to make up for it. This year, I'll have had the chance to work an additional 50 days, but took time off to spend with the family.
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            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by VirtualMonkey View Post
              she's okay with it...says she is anyway. I think the chance of a great summer holiday based on the money might sway her.
              i'm a family man really but the two days a week from home means i'd actually spend more time with them than a close perm job.

              Thanks for the comments NLUK succinct and understated as always.....
              I take your points though
              The 2 days WFH would make it very attractive to me, I live down South but contract in Scotland. I get 1 day (1/2 day actually WFH) and the long weekend every weekend is great. Having said that I am single and have my kids every other weekend so being away is easy.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
                That assumes that the two days from home actually materialize. If they don't, then you are significantly worse off.

                Assuming you take the contract, what happens at the end of it? If the next contract is more than 55 minutes away, and has no working from home (hardly an unrealistic assumption), then from the end of this role, you'll be worse off in terms of family time.

                Assume that your next contract is going to be away from home, so no family time during the week. Would you look to take longer holidays to make up for that? It's what I do - there isn't a decent enough permie role near home, so I'll deal with the weekly tears when I leave, knowing that I'll take plenty of holiday to make up for it. This year, I'll have had the chance to work an additional 50 days, but took time off to spend with the family.
                Tis true, you could get canned in a couple of weeks, anything could happen to the project, yes the Money is nice but this contracting whilst atractive is not always about the money, its a complete change of mentality, i would say it would be a leap into the unknown if you value family life and stability stick with the permie
                Last edited by Support Monkey; 2 November 2011, 10:51.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Support Monkey View Post
                  Tis true, you could get canned in a couple of weeks, anything could happen to the project, yes the Money is nice but this contracting whilst atractive is not always about the money, its a complete change of mentality, i would say it would be a leap into the unknown if you value family life and stability stick with the permie
                  You can get canned in a couple of weeks in a permie role too .... I got canned after 5 months of a 6 month probabtion in my last one when the project I was on stalled. Hadd all the risk of contracting without the benefits, and so I decided to contract from then on.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by JamJarST View Post
                    You can get canned in a couple of weeks in a permie role too .... I got canned after 5 months of a 6 month probabtion in my last one when the project I was on stalled. Hadd all the risk of contracting without the benefits, and so I decided to contract from then on.
                    Tis also true however its less likely, you were unlucky but generally permie hires jump through a lot of hoops (several interviews, references, writen tests) to get the right person, contractors (phone interview, start monday) by the very nature of the job are dispensible from day one

                    Comment

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