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Bored with contracting.
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...my quagmire of greed....my cesspit of laziness and unfairness....all I am doing is sticking two fingers up at nurses, doctors and other hard working employed professionals...
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Ain’t that the truth – bounced into a lower level role close to home, good client, easy life to keep the meter running but missing the responsibility and people from the last one.
You get a few people who bounce into careers they love and the rest have to bump along doing what they can. It’s hard to moan as a contractor when you are getting so much wedge, you can be sure most of the worker drones earning a quarter of that will be just as bored.
I don’t really have a passion for anything that could turn into a career but do wish I had taken more risks when younger to setup my own business (people who do this well say they couldn’t work for anyone else, same as contractors say they can’t go perm). BUT, I am aware that my too-cosy middle class upbringing probably left me without the required ‘hunger’Comment
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WHSOriginally posted by minestrone View PostI a bored out my tits contracting. tulip jobs working for tulip companies working with tulip code and tulip managers who have tulip for brains.
Whilst I'm grateful for an easy gig, that keeps renewing, and getting paid a shed load, I go home every evening thinking there has to be more than this to working life and I want to run a proper business, selling proper products/services with employees and all sorts. I just don't know what it is yet.It's about time I changed this sig...Comment
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Ain't that the truth. Post people would kill for a £70-£100K income, but for contractors it's there for the taking with the right balls. But it's a double edged sword. To earn that from your own business is bloody hard graft, why would you swap.Originally posted by lukemg View PostI don’t really have a passion for anything that could turn into a career but do wish I had taken more risks when younger to setup my own business (people who do this well say they couldn’t work for anyone else, same as contractors say they can’t go perm). BUT, I am aware that my too-cosy middle class upbringing probably left me without the required ‘hunger’
And what a lot of hassle that is as well.Originally posted by MrRobin View PostWHS
Whilst I'm grateful for an easy gig, that keeps renewing, and getting paid a shed load, I go home every evening thinking there has to be more than this to working life and I want to run a proper business, selling proper products/services with employees and all sorts. I just don't know what it is yet.
The last option is perm. Move up the career ladder. But again, move from £100k at low tax, to salaried(!!!).
I think I may give it all up and become a priest.What happens in General, stays in General.You know what they say about assumptions!Comment
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are you me?!Originally posted by lukemg View PostAin’t that the truth – bounced into a lower level role close to home, good client, easy life to keep the meter running but missing the responsibility and people from the last one.
You get a few people who bounce into careers they love and the rest have to bump along doing what they can. It’s hard to moan as a contractor when you are getting so much wedge, you can be sure most of the worker drones earning a quarter of that will be just as bored.
I don’t really have a passion for anything that could turn into a career but do wish I had taken more risks when younger to setup my own business (people who do this well say they couldn’t work for anyone else, same as contractors say they can’t go perm). BUT, I am aware that my too-cosy middle class upbringing probably left me without the required ‘hunger’
I'm much the same, can't complain about the money I'm able to earn through contracting - woe is me!Comment
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I don't mind the hassle. I'm prepared to put in the effort and time if it means it will actually go directly to building up my own business, rather than continually fixing someone elses. I would work towards something scalable... contracting is so linear, i.e. I am the bottleneck, I can only work a certain number of hours a weekOriginally posted by MarillionFan View PostAnd what a lot of hassle that is as well.It's about time I changed this sig...Comment
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You work in IT. Write a killer app and sell it on t'interweb.Originally posted by MrRobin View PostI don't mind the hassle. I'm prepared to put in the effort and time if it means it will actually go directly to building up my own business, rather than continually fixing someone elses. I would work towards something scalable... contracting is so linear, i.e. I am the bottleneck, I can only work a certain number of hours a week
HTHKnock first as I might be balancing my chakras.Comment
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For it to work I believe you have to give it 100%. Splitting my time doesn't work and causes a bottleneck.Originally posted by MrRobin View PostI don't mind the hassle. I'm prepared to put in the effort and time if it means it will actually go directly to building up my own business, rather than continually fixing someone elses. I would work towards something scalable... contracting is so linear, i.e. I am the bottleneck, I can only work a certain number of hours a weekWhat happens in General, stays in General.You know what they say about assumptions!Comment
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Move to a bedsit in Brum, await a sofa and abuse some squirrels.Originally posted by suityou01 View PostYou work in IT. Write a killer app and sell it on t'interweb.
HTHComment
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Yeah same differenceOriginally posted by DimPrawn View PostMove to a bedsit in Brum, await a sofa and abuse some squirrels.
Knock first as I might be balancing my chakras.Comment
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