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The commonly accepted (loaded) meaning of the term Contractor, has changed in the last 10 years.
It used to imply a high level operator at the very top of their game, earning a lot of cash.
These days it is merely a temp. The skill level and day rate are often very average. The employer has the upper hand these days, with regard to contracting.
The commonly accepted (loaded) meaning of the term Contractor, has changed in the last 10 years.
It used to imply a high level operator at the very top of their game, earning a lot of cash.
These days it is merely a temp. The skill level and day rate are often very average. The employer has the upper hand these days, with regard to contracting.
Does it? My skill set is back to the glory days of the early 90s where the conversation starts we have these options for you are you interested in either?
3 short conversations, 2 offers with the other rejected by me before they got the option to offer.
Yes, I may be boasting but things haven't changed. There were utterly tulip contractors in 1994, there are utterly tulip contractors around now.
The market sorta responded by making most contracts 1 month subject to extension.
But you're right, I can't work from home at my current gig due to tulipty past contractors taking advantage of it. So I must drive 1hr there and 1hr back to sit on my own in a noisy open plan office of 200+ people and work without talking to anyone drinking crap instant coffee.
Unless you're the lead dog, the scenery never changes.
The market sorta responded by making most contracts 1 month subject to extension.
But you're right, I can't work from home at my current gig due to tulipty past contractors taking advantage of it. So I must drive 1hr there and 1hr back to sit on my own in a noisy open plan office of 200+ people and work without talking to anyone drinking crap instant coffee.
Exactly, independent consultancy is now what contracting used to be. Contracting is now what temping used to be.
Contracting as it was, has died. Long live consulting.
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