Working away from home at moment in a demanding support role. Environment is a bit chaotic but OK. Nice crew. First month I had all sorts of problems with getting required accesses and site specific training but the atmosphere was good and they apologised and made it clear that it the slow start wasn't my fault.
Now, if anything my little team's situation is a little more stable (a bug fix release for the main system last week seems to have gone really well) and I have my feet well under the table.
However, my manager's manager has several other projects on the go and they are in difficulties. (Concidentally?) He is now questioning my progress and asking why I can't fix problems faster and also take on some of the workload on one of the projects in trouble. The fact that the lack of organisation in the first month is the main reason that I am not more conversant with their systems and common problems has been conveniently forgotten, and I get the impression that reminding him of that will just make things worse.
Nothing has been said but I have a horrible feeling that they see 'professional day' contractors like myself as a blank cheque and suspect that if I started to do 11 hour days (for 7.5hours pay) to help pull one of his projects out of the sh1t that would be just peachy in his eyes.
Sod that. Even though I depend on this guy for renewal I have never worked long hours without big money in return and even then not for more than a few weeks at a time, never ongoing.
Worth mentioning that several people have come and gone in this role in the last couple of years. I'd love to have a chat with one of them..
It may just be that he has just gone off me. No clue whatsoever here - in 25 years I have always been the bloke who gets along with folk, even those some people can't stand.
Anyone experienced this? Is the situation redeemable if the ultimate boss just fancies trying a different freelancer?
My direct boss is OK, friendly and helpful. But I am in no doubt that my needs/fate count for little next to keeping her boss happy.
Hacks me off - I have really put myself out for this gig but I don't think I can stay positive for much longer in these circumstances.
Now, if anything my little team's situation is a little more stable (a bug fix release for the main system last week seems to have gone really well) and I have my feet well under the table.
However, my manager's manager has several other projects on the go and they are in difficulties. (Concidentally?) He is now questioning my progress and asking why I can't fix problems faster and also take on some of the workload on one of the projects in trouble. The fact that the lack of organisation in the first month is the main reason that I am not more conversant with their systems and common problems has been conveniently forgotten, and I get the impression that reminding him of that will just make things worse.
Nothing has been said but I have a horrible feeling that they see 'professional day' contractors like myself as a blank cheque and suspect that if I started to do 11 hour days (for 7.5hours pay) to help pull one of his projects out of the sh1t that would be just peachy in his eyes.
Sod that. Even though I depend on this guy for renewal I have never worked long hours without big money in return and even then not for more than a few weeks at a time, never ongoing.
Worth mentioning that several people have come and gone in this role in the last couple of years. I'd love to have a chat with one of them..
It may just be that he has just gone off me. No clue whatsoever here - in 25 years I have always been the bloke who gets along with folk, even those some people can't stand.
Anyone experienced this? Is the situation redeemable if the ultimate boss just fancies trying a different freelancer?
My direct boss is OK, friendly and helpful. But I am in no doubt that my needs/fate count for little next to keeping her boss happy.
Hacks me off - I have really put myself out for this gig but I don't think I can stay positive for much longer in these circumstances.
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