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Please Advise - im new to contracting!

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    #71
    Originally posted by MPwannadecentincome View Post
    Welcome to the forum - you can expect ridicule with every question you pose - just ignore it - I quickly learnt to!
    Oh I just get ignored most of the time - forums are much of a muchness, cliques and flaming and ridicule mostly. But its good practice for the world of being a contractor.

    NewToThis its pretty darn cheap to get a ticket to Australasia and even tho the pound is becoming the peso our $s dropping too so it doesn't take too many pounds to hang out down this end of the world - if you have pounds everything here is 1/3 the cost you are paying for it.

    Theres a few contracting necessities that I think most of the contractors here are agreed on - 1) you need a rainy day fund, and 2) you need to be able and willing to travel. Its just easy to get into that rut of loading yourself up with debt (well, it was) so you can't up and move, and not thinking far enough out of the square to consider ALL the options i.e. moving to NZ or Aus or even Abu Dabhi (the new Dubai) to work.

    Once you decide to just go its actually a lot easier than you think. My general rule about this is to go where the jobs and the money are, but then I have no commitments so thats easy for me.

    Course was good thanks - next month its Analysis Services then March its the BI course then the exam (gulp).

    I only had two contracts in the UK - a 3-monther at Glaxo that went for 18 months until I befriended the ex-girlfriend of a manager (who was still burning a torch for her) who prompty terminated my contract when he became my boss (LOL), then a 3 monther that went for 4 years in the City. Best 'job' I ever had.

    And all coz I decided to up and move to London for my career.

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      #72
      Originally posted by newtothis View Post
      As a matter of interest, you f***king bored? seriously?!?!?

      Your obviously not married, otherwise, you would be making love right now, and not looking for spelling mistakes on forums.

      Take THIS apostrophe, shove it up your ass!
      you think married people make love at 19.53?

      your
      possessive pronominal adjective
      of, belonging to, made by, or done by you: also used before some formal titles Your Honor, Your Majesty
      INFORMAL the: used to designate a typical member of a group or class: often followed by average

      you're
      you're (yo̵or, yo̵̅o̅r)
      you are

      Comment


        #73
        Originally posted by zeitghost
        More than once a month...
        once a month...
        Drivelling in TPD is not a mental health issue. We're just community blogging, that's all.

        Xenophon said: "CUK Geek of the Week". A gingerjedi certified "Elitist Tw@t". Posting rated @ 5 lard points

        Comment


          #74
          Originally posted by chicane View Post
          Your figures are based on the assumption that the contractor is able to work almost every day of the year available to them. I'd imagine (especially in this climate) that many contractors will be working more like 180 days every year. The reality in terms of pay is therefore likely to be around halfway between the two extremes cited by pmeswani and yourself - somewhere in the 45k mark for a £250pd contractor.
          That is pretty close to my assumption as well. Also there is the Employee benefits that needs to be paid for as well. Not all companies have it, but some do... and some companies pay an employer contributions to a company pension.
          If your company is the best place to work in, for a mere £500 p/d, you can advertise here.

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