- Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
- Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!
Un-perma-boomed
Collapse
X
-
-
CongratulationsOriginally posted by basshead View PostResigned from a permie job last week after lasting about 12 weeks, it wasn't right for me and got me totally stressed out
Applied for a contract on my last day last Friday, two telephone interviews later and the gig is mine starting later this week at a v. comfortable rate and closest gig to home I've ever had
Can I have my badge and gun back plz?
Comment
-
-
Welcome back to the land of the living
+50 Xeno Geek Points
Come back Toolpusher, scotspine, Voodooflux.Pogle
As for the rest of you - DILLIGAF
Purveyor of fine quality smut since 2005
CUK Olympic University Challenge Champions 2010/2012
Comment
-
Well done ! Fortune favours the brave. If it's tulip get out asap, perm or contract. A mate did something similar last year, lasted 4 weeks of perm after a decade plus of contracting.Originally posted by basshead View PostResigned from a permie job last week after lasting about 12 weeks, it wasn't right for me and got me totally stressed out
Applied for a contract on my last day last Friday, two telephone interviews later and the gig is mine starting later this week at a v. comfortable rate and closest gig to home I've ever had
Can I have my badge and gun back plz?
Comment
-
It is very fortunate how this gig has fallen in my lap, I've always been a lucky sodOriginally posted by rootsnall View PostWell done ! Fortune favours the brave. If it's tulip get out asap, perm or contract. A mate did something similar last year, lasted 4 weeks of perm after a decade plus of contracting.
I'd hoped the perm gig was going to set me up for the next few years, based from home, 60k salary, large organisation etc. But it was not as I expected it to be, the role far too high level (enterprise architecture) and not technical enough and no hands-on to it and I felt like I was losing skills the longer I stayed. It was also much longer hours, more pressure and travel than I'd ever experienced contracting. A no-brainer to leave really
You live and learn. I learnt that I don't want to do enterprise architecture in a large BPO organisation with a preference for outsourcing
Comment
-
Originally posted by basshead View PostResigned from a permie job last week after lasting about 12 weeks, it wasn't right for me and got me totally stressed out
Applied for a contract on my last day last Friday, two telephone interviews later and the gig is mine starting later this week at a v. comfortable rate and closest gig to home I've ever had
Can I have my badge and gun back plz?
Welcome back. 
That is how a woman would think.Originally posted by Pondlife View PostWhere's your self respect people.
Basshead dumps you for some flusie in a tight blouse of a permie role and then 12 weeks later expects to be welcomed back to the contracting marital bed like nothing's happened.
Most contractors are men and men can go for years or even decades without seeing someone then meet up over a beer and carry on where they left off.
I am reminded of a line from a book that I had to read when I was younger:
there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents, than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentanceComment
-
Is it that we should think of contractors as heroic sheriffs who are working hard to right some wrongs, and not to confuse contractors with 'cowboys' like some of the other posters have implied?Originally posted by swamp View PostThere is a lesson in here somewhere...
Comment
-
Welcome (back) to The Dark Side, young Vader.Originally posted by basshead View PostCan I have my badge and gun back plz?

Nomaddnomadd liked this postComment
-
I like to think more "hired gun". Called in to do a job for a short while, then ride back out of town, job (hopefully well) done.Originally posted by CheeseSlice View PostIs it that we should think of contractors as heroic sheriffs who are working hard to right some wrongs, and not to confuse contractors with 'cowboys' like some of the other posters have implied?
Comment
- Home
- News & Features
- First Timers
- IR35 / S660 / BN66
- Employee Benefit Trusts
- Agency Workers Regulations
- MSC Legislation
- Limited Companies
- Dividends
- Umbrella Company
- VAT / Flat Rate VAT
- Job News & Guides
- Money News & Guides
- Guide to Contracts
- Successful Contracting
- Contracting Overseas
- Contractor Calculators
- MVL
- Contractor Expenses
Advertisers

Comment