Originally posted by BrilloPad
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Do not jump into contracting now!!!
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I've seen much of the rest of the world. It is brutal and cruel and dark, Rome is the light. -
Originally posted by Turion View PostCan you explain in detail with evidence and research (links) to back up this statement. I'm sure many 'members the board' would be interested to know?Comment
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Turions tone sounds very familiar. Turion , do you know what an EB is ?
(\__/)
(>'.'<)
("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to WorkComment
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I'm 46 and don't seem to have any problems getting contracts in the £425 - £525 per day rate range - outside London.
Perhaps Service Management is different........?
TComment
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My present client is mid way through a raft of redundancies in the IT dept and then backfilling those jobs with contractors. In about 2 months the entire project management team will be contractors and the rest of the 100 person IT department will be 70/30 contractor/permie. And this is a public sector quango with supposed job security. Any permie jobs in PM up here in scotland that would pay what i get contracting would demand the level of hours and stress that i have no intention of giving....i have a life outside work that i like and work to fund this. I've never been on the bench but if i was i would get a job in tescos/bar working nights to bring in some dosh while job searching during the day. wouldnt sit around stratching my arse waiting for the phone to ringComment
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Quitting when ahead
After contracting for many years, I've gone back to Permiedom.
I've earned stacks as a contractor and had a nice time - great!
Would I have prefered to keep contracting?
- Yes if I was younger and without responsibilities - I've met too many divorced, alcoholic contractors (sad, lonely and broke from the Alimony)
- Yes if the contracts were on my doorstep - they no longer are - not worth the expense if coming home every weekend
- Yes if the rates had kept pace with inflation - They haven't (Used to be 1K a day
- Yes if my skillsets were still rare - They aren't - one word - India
- Yes if my skillsets are in demand by clients - Still needed - for now!
1 out of 5 ain't good enough to settle the money vs suitcase living debate.
I worked out that the permie job equates to 9 months a year contracting. It used to be 4.5 months!
I can work at home and the office is a few miles away.
I'm happy with my choice - Made my money and nothing to prove.
Anyone who contracted in the Nineties can tell you that THAT was the time to be a contractor. Constantly being feted by agents because of the shortage, rates going up, no competation for any roles, paid expenses - man we lived like kings! - it was sweet!
Going contracting now? Its a bit like mining for gold - all the good seams have gone - just scraps left.Comment
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Originally posted by Meerkat View PostI've never been on the bench but if i was i would get a job in tescos
You'd probably need to 'tailor' your CV to get HR to seriously consider you for a job as a late night shelf stacker.
and practise questions like: "Where do you think you will be in 5 yrs", and "Why should we let you join our team"Comment
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The Ivor Bigun contracting test...
'Would I have prefered to keep contracting?
- Yes if I was younger and without responsibilities - I've met too many divorced, alcoholic contractors (sad, lonely and broke from the Alimony)
- Yes if the contracts were on my doorstep - they no longer are - not worth the expense if coming home every weekend
- Yes if the rates had kept pace with inflation - They haven't (Used to be 1K a day
- Yes if my skillsets were still rare - They aren't - one word - India
- Yes if my skillsets are in demand by clients - Still needed - for now!
'
I got 3 out of 5, guess that means it's still contracting for me.
Milan.Comment
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