Originally posted by alreadypacked
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Whats the views on rate reductions?
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Yes, it goes down, and then it goes down again.Originally posted by Chaffinch View PostAs a newbie to contracting - is the market cyclical?
HTH BIDIComment
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Yes, it used to be 'Aston Martinical' back in the good old days, then it went a bit 'BMWical', but we could live with that, and now a rusty bicycle is probably the best you'll be able to afford.Originally posted by Chaffinch View PostAs a newbie to contracting - is the market cyclical?And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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Haha, for a second there I was almost getting some much needed good adviceOriginally posted by Mich the Tester View PostYes, it used to be 'Aston Martinical' back in the good old days, then it went a bit 'BMWical', but we could live with that, and now a rusty bicycle is probably the best you'll be able to afford.
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Budgets and work loads and other factors.Originally posted by Chaffinch View PostAs a newbie to contracting - is the market cyclical?
[Caveat]My experience.
Companies tend to decide project budgets when the new tax year comes so for the UK it tends to better May or June and Europe Feb or Mar. There is a constant flow for the rest of the year as projects are not solely driven by budget.
Often a surge late summer as PM realise that they are going to miss their deadlines.
In Europe Aug and Sep are slow as those are holiday periods and the guys that sign the forms are off for one of those two months.
I have been doing this for 15 years and it feels like swimming against the tide. I have increased my rate year on year (except this year
mad
) but my outgoings are outpacing that. I do well but my disposable seems to be shrinking. Still way better than perm.
Just saying like.
where there's chaos, there's cash !
I could agree with you, but then we would both be wrong!
Lowering the tone since 1963Comment
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I 'kin hate clients doing this mid-contract. Fair enough at a renewal, kick out the sob story and offer a lower rate. Most people are on a 3-monther anyway so not going to make any difference to the client.
My policy is to get searching for an alternative and take the reduction if I can't get one. From that point I will remain professional but you can forget about all the usual extras e.g. time, covering people on projects during leave, informal on-call. I also won't stop looking till I find another job (which I never do during a contract) and will walk if need be to take it.Comment
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Yeah, cheers for thatOriginally posted by zeitghostEr, that was good advice.
Just light hearted response to the other comment
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The market is cyclical around budgets and holidays, UK is slightly different to Europe.Originally posted by Chaffinch View PostAs a newbie to contracting - is the market cyclical?
Financial year starts in April so many projects get their budgets /kick-off then. Depending on the type of work you do will depend on when you get hired for a new project PM, BA first, then BA DBA etc. (not set in stone, but from my experience). Projects are reviewed each quarter and adjustments made. Holidays around August, so new people to be added to project might get delayed until Sept. Most project have a bigger review at the half year mark so more people might be added around October, so look in September but you might not find anything until October. Hiring will go on until end November but then it will go dead after that until maybe until the end of January.
Good news is the European financial year starts January, so if you really need to work they are hiring in December. Depending on budgets in the UK they may pick up a few critical people in the last quarter or if they have a critical go live date the will hire in the last quarter. Then we are back to the beginning again.
I always plan when I am leaving a contract, if I want a new role when that contract is over. I have been offered a 3 month extensions that I have turned down because it would leave me looking for a new role in the middle of summer or the middle of winter. It’s better to finish and get a new 6 month role than take 3 months and have 2-3 months on the bench when you don’t want it. Also being on the bench may turn you desperate and you don’t come off well in interview. The 2-3 months turns into 12.
HTHFiscal nomad it's legal.Comment
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It gets worse; next step is to downgrade the bog roll to tracing paper.Originally posted by swamp View PostDid they lock the stationary cupboard before the rate cut?And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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