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Not really, as a I contractor I always book the time I'm not available in my diary and let the client know, in this case my Manager left the company so I started reporting to his boss who has no idea I have a holiday booked
Not really, as a I contractor I always book the time I'm not available in my diary and let the client know, in this case my Manager left the company so I started reporting to his boss who has no idea I have a holiday booked
Not really, as a I contractor I always book the time I'm not available in my diary and let the client know, in this case my Manager left the company so I started reporting to his boss who has no idea I have a holiday booked
I told them last month way before they let others go, my manager who knows about the holidays as well left , its booked in my dairy too.I'm in sitting at my desk doing nothing
Clueless. Yes, look after yourself, but keeping client happy is number one aim. Even if that means delivering to them difficult realities. At the end of the day, you constantly whinge about your clients, so I'm not sure you have a clue at how to keep yourself happy, never mind your clients.
Crock of tulipe. Yes keep client happy if possible, but end of day look after yourself.
Clueless. Yes, look after yourself, but keeping client happy is number one aim. Even if that means delivering to them difficult realities. At the end of the day, you constantly whinge about your clients, so I'm not sure you have a clue at how to keep yourself happy, never mind your clients.
Stick to your guns. Do what you can to help as long as its not to the detriment of you or your new gig or your family.
If they play funny buggers, keep timesheets, go with the flow and follow process if needs be.
Two weeks before you go? Do you get timesheet signed every week? I'd be on the ball getting first one signed, if they refuse then I'd consider not turning up for 2nd week.
Explain that to them. Sign off first week or I wont be here next week. Of course, nothing saying they wont refuse to sign the 2nd week adter that.
To the OP. I'd have chat with Safe Collections who post on here regularly. I'd say you are not gonna get your last pay at this rate so better get your rights sorted. If the agent or client sees that you are clued up they are less likely to try withhold the last payment. If you look like a push over then they'll try it on.
Be prepared to state your case as early as possible i.e. what your rights to payment is, what interest you intend to pay on late payment and when you will start to charge interest, probably quoting the late payment of commercial debts legislation linked below. This should put the willies up them and avoid a long drawn out battle..
Thanks everyone, update on my situation, client sent me a list of tasks to complete before I go nothing related to what I do,I'm tempted to paste them all in here but to avoid issues later,here are some
* Refine the process and remove manual steps in deployments ,how to migrate to amazon aws, integrate sonarQuebe into builds , before pullrequests ,look into CI and document best practices of CI
I'm a Test Automation QA with 13 years of experience.
I'm now trying to delay the start of my new gig and still trying to figure what the client actually seeing me as (Dev ops/ Developer not sure which one)
You kinda answered to you own question at the end. Keeping the client happy is part of any B2B relationship. Also asking the client will identify if the legal action threat is coming from them or the Agent (most likely the later).
If the client is not happy with you being on a holiday for 2 weeks out of 4 weeks notice, they can just not sign the timesheets for the other 2 weeks (and rightfully so, as according to the OP he is not doing any work). Then all the sudden instead of missing 2 weeks invoicing you end up missing 4
Not to mention that leaving an unhappy customer behind will reflect bad on your references.
Crock of tulipe. Yes keep client happy if possible, but end of day look after yourself.
You are forgetting that when a client gives notice the contractor isn't happy. It appears to be a pretty balanced situation.
Client gives notice and is happy --> Contractor wazzed off
Contractor gives notice and is happy --> Client wazzed off
Don't think you can apportion blame or acting unfairly really. It's the same both ways.
You also have to appreciate this is a client/supplier relationship. If the supplier gives notice it puts the client in a more disadvantaged situation as he doesn't get his requirements filled.
True but expected to suck it up. Doesnt (usually) end up with contractor threatening client etc.
Thanks everyone, update on my situation, client sent me a list of tasks to complete before I go nothing related to what I do,I'm tempted to paste them all in here but to avoid issues later,here are some
* Refine the process and remove manual steps in deployments ,how to migrate to amazon aws, integrate sonarQuebe into builds , before pullrequests ,look into CI and document best practices of CI
I'm a Test Automation QA with 13 years of experience.
I'm now trying to delay the start of my new gig and still trying to figure what the client actually seeing me as (Dev ops/ Developer not sure which one)
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