I currently have an offer for a 12-month FTC and I'm waiting to hear the outcome of an interview I had for a contract (8 months). The agency for the former are pushing me for an answer by tomorrow, so I'm trying to figure out which option I'll take if I get an offer on the contract tomorrow. The basic details of each are:
1) 12 month FTC at 45k, plus benefits (pension, health insurance, etc) after 3 months.
2) 8 month contract at £275 per day. They said it'd likely go on beyond 8 months.
Unfortunately neither are in the realms of the big money some people seem to get, but both seem very decent opportunities to me (for where I'm at in my career).
I've done some basic calculations with the day-rate and it seems as though the contract is the financially better option, especially if it goes beyond 8 months or I find other work in the 4 months afterwards. However, I've read on here that '1000 * hourly rate' is the equivalent salary - which in this case equates to around £37k... so it the £45k better on this view?
I currently work through an umbrella company, although would consider going LTD for the contract.
1) 12 month FTC at 45k, plus benefits (pension, health insurance, etc) after 3 months.
2) 8 month contract at £275 per day. They said it'd likely go on beyond 8 months.
Unfortunately neither are in the realms of the big money some people seem to get, but both seem very decent opportunities to me (for where I'm at in my career).
I've done some basic calculations with the day-rate and it seems as though the contract is the financially better option, especially if it goes beyond 8 months or I find other work in the 4 months afterwards. However, I've read on here that '1000 * hourly rate' is the equivalent salary - which in this case equates to around £37k... so it the £45k better on this view?
I currently work through an umbrella company, although would consider going LTD for the contract.



). She struggled from the start and was booted out after three months. In the meantime plenty of HR paperwork and performance plans for someone who obviously just wasn't a good fit for a short term, hit the ground running role.
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