Is it only my impression or the majority of higher level IT jobs (such as architects or proj/programme manager) are assigned almost exclusively to permanent employees?
Having a quick look at jobserve (my mistake, I was idle for the last year), I came to notice that the contracts are predominantly, and would say 95%, reserved for specialist in an IT area (examples, Oracle, SAP, WebSphere, Unix, etc).
What's the point of becoming an architect/programme manager if your salary is going to be the same as an IT specialist and you trade-off non-existing security in return? Sure, you get a decent perm salary of 70-80k, in some cases close to 100k, but unless you become a senior backstabber manager it's hard to go over that.
From one discussion today with a senior manager, they think that for higher roles they want "committed" people. My idea is who can be really committed to a company if not for the money? Isn't that only a way that low skilled people are promoted to higher profiles because they don't have the proper skills to go contracting?
Having a quick look at jobserve (my mistake, I was idle for the last year), I came to notice that the contracts are predominantly, and would say 95%, reserved for specialist in an IT area (examples, Oracle, SAP, WebSphere, Unix, etc).
What's the point of becoming an architect/programme manager if your salary is going to be the same as an IT specialist and you trade-off non-existing security in return? Sure, you get a decent perm salary of 70-80k, in some cases close to 100k, but unless you become a senior backstabber manager it's hard to go over that.
From one discussion today with a senior manager, they think that for higher roles they want "committed" people. My idea is who can be really committed to a company if not for the money? Isn't that only a way that low skilled people are promoted to higher profiles because they don't have the proper skills to go contracting?
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