Originally posted by umeshk
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Reply to: State of the Market
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Previously on "State of the Market"
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Originally posted by umeshk View PostI've been benched for almost 5 months now, running on fumes now financially. I've been on a couple of permie interviews, but trying to explain why I want to go back to perm role after contracting seems to be a hurdle I'm not able to get over. I've even got to a point I'm going for perm roles with salaries when I first started in IT in my early 20's. Is that a mistake, or should I just take it on the chin, take the role to atleast have income?
As for going for any role, you probably need to dumb down your cv for entry roles, as I doubt a lot of companies would take on someone way overqualified. If you are in a dire financial situation then any job will be better than no job. Best of luck!
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Originally posted by umeshk View PostI've been benched for almost 5 months now, running on fumes now financially. I've been on a couple of permie interviews, but trying to explain why I want to go back to perm role after contracting seems to be a hurdle I'm not able to get over. I've even got to a point I'm going for perm roles with salaries when I first started in IT in my early 20's. Is that a mistake, or should I just take it on the chin, take the role to atleast have income?Last edited by escapeUK; Yesterday, 18:06.
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I've been benched for almost 5 months now, running on fumes now financially. I've been on a couple of permie interviews, but trying to explain why I want to go back to perm role after contracting seems to be a hurdle I'm not able to get over. I've even got to a point I'm going for perm roles with salaries when I first started in IT in my early 20's. Is that a mistake, or should I just take it on the chin, take the role to atleast have income?
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The UK stock market is only up because the pound has gone down against the dollar, and any predicted dividends look higher in dollars with the new exchange rates... so people are prepared to pay more for stock with the same dollar returns
On the other hand any Brit invested in US stocks, will see they have gained massively in the last few months
Originally posted by tsmith View Post
FTSE ALL TIME HIGH! Meanwhile
“Today’s jobs figures are surprisingly poor, with a steep fall in employment and a sharp rise in those out of work, including an unexpected rise in unemployment,” Tony Wilson, the director at the Institute for Employment Studies, said.
https://www.theguardian.com/business...interest-rates
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The UK stock market (FTSE100 or FTSE250) isn't powering towards anything. Their performance over the last decade has been staggeringly bad (as per Reuters):
NASDAQ +388%
S&P500 +259%
Nikkei Japan + 138%
Eursostoxx +62%
FTSE100 +13%
FTSE250 MINUS 17%
The UK market weighting in the MCSI world index has halved in the last 15 years. It seems hardly any investors want to buy UK stocks and it's not surprising considering the dull plodding companies that make up most of the index.
Between the two indices, it gives a good idea of how UK companies are poor wealth creators and by extension, well paid job creators.
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Originally posted by Fraidycat View Post
The FTSE 250 is a better indicator of the state of the UK contract market and it is still way off its high.
But in general the UK stock market is a joke compared to the US, Microsoft was recently worth more than the entire FTSE 100 combined, and you could buy the whole of the FTSE 250 as-well with the change you had left over.
Jobserve headline number can fluctuate quite a bit intra week as sometimes they seem to clear out the database and repopulate it, so some days it can under report.
As for references, you could give the annoying agent your previous Agency as the reference if you don't want to give them the end client.
“Today’s jobs figures are surprisingly poor, with a steep fall in employment and a sharp rise in those out of work, including an unexpected rise in unemployment,” Tony Wilson, the director at the Institute for Employment Studies, said.
https://www.theguardian.com/business...interest-rates
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Originally posted by DrGUID View PostFTSE powering towards 9K but Jobserve vacancies have now collapsed to 23K. Something has to give.
There's been an uptick in agents asking for references
But in general the UK stock market is a joke compared to the US, Microsoft was recently worth more than the entire FTSE 100 combined, and you could buy the whole of the FTSE 250 as-well with the change you had left over.
Jobserve headline number can fluctuate quite a bit intra week as sometimes they seem to clear out the database and repopulate it, so some days it can under report.
As for references, you could give the annoying agent your previous Agency as the reference if you don't want to give them the end client.Last edited by Fraidycat; Yesterday, 08:54.
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FTSE powering towards 9K but Jobserve vacancies have now collapsed to 23K. Something has to give.
Getting the occasional interview but it's one a week rather than two a day like in normal times.
There's been an uptick in agents asking for references (but the other candidates are supplying them). The latest is long conversation followed by an email with no job spec, just space for me to add my referees.
Not much on the boards apart from the numerous Noir ghost vacancies.
It kind of feels like 2002 when the general economy motored along but IT was in an epic hangover (and the FTSE did indeed collapse).
I will continue working on side projects...
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Originally posted by dsc View PostFor permie roles it seems that "internal hires" is the go-to term these days. Certainly explains the amount of rejections even for close to perfect fits. Or so I keep telling myself
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I'm another who was a contractor because it allowed me to take more time off, did that for 15 years. Pre-covid I almost never worked during the summer months, through choice, never stopped me finding new gigs. But it does seem like those days are over. I took a perm role in feb 2020 after 6 months on the bench, unfortunately it was in crypto, so that blew up by the end of 2022 - found a contract out of the wreckage of that, which took me to November 2023. Since then, nothing. Many applications but just tumble weed.
Still can't quite believe I'm seeing gigs advertised at rates I was getting 15 years ago.
But I do have an interview for a contract role today, so fingers crossed...
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For permie roles it seems that "internal hires" is the go-to term these days. Certainly explains the amount of rejections even for close to perfect fits. Or so I keep telling myself
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I am another who went into contracting for more time off. Over twenty-five years, I rarely worked more than six months of the year. More recently, I did longer contracts but that's because of covid and looking after a kid.
The lifestyle was great but it did mean that I tended towards the tuliptier jobs that more professional people didn't need to take. Suited me fine.
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