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Previously on "State of the Market"

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  • Fraidycat
    replied
    Originally posted by SussexSeagull View Post

    Would need to be a year on year comparison with Autumn last year.

    Not saying that the market is in any way good but I am not sure Jobserve is the force it used to be. I can't remember the last contract I got through it and am fairly sure the ones I have got were never advertised on there.

    I use it more for short term relative numbers, month on month change is an indicator of if things are improving or going backwards. Sadly its the latter at the moment.

    Another indicator i use: One of my old agents has all their roles listed on their website site. When things are good they have 20+ roles listed, they are currently down to six roles. Which is similar to what they had at the Covid lows in 2020.

    Leave a comment:


  • SussexSeagull
    replied
    Originally posted by Fraidycat View Post
    Talking of Jobserve, job listings completely collapsed on Jobserve around two weeks after the budget. From a high of 43,000 down to 16,000 in the headline number on the front page this week.

    It is a little bit early to blame that entire drop on Xmas?

    The UK government isn't helping with confidence, one hope is Trump ignites confidence in the US, and the Big Tech firms in the US and the US Investment banks then start hiring again in the UK, so kick starting things here as well..
    Would need to be a year on year comparison with Autumn last year.

    Not saying that the market is in any way good but I am not sure Jobserve is the force it used to be. I can't remember the last contract I got through it and am fairly sure the ones I have got were never advertised on there.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fraidycat
    replied
    Talking of Jobserve, job listings completely collapsed on Jobserve around two weeks after the budget. From a high of 43,000 down to 16,000 in the headline number on the front page this week.

    It is a little bit early to blame that entire drop on Xmas?

    The UK government isn't helping with confidence, one hope is Trump ignites confidence in the US, and the Big Tech firms in the US and the US Investment banks then start hiring again in the UK, so kick starting things here as well..
    Last edited by Fraidycat; Today, 16:44.

    Leave a comment:


  • SchumiStars
    replied
    I started using Jobserve in 1999 to find my first role. It was the .dot.com boom and I had absolutely no problems getting interviews and offers. It was fantastic.

    I remember having 5 interviews one day and as a young grad, in a oversized suit, walking from one offer to another offer. Loved it!

    Leave a comment:


  • SussexSeagull
    replied
    Originally posted by hairymouse View Post

    The whole thing is an absolute mess, but slightly better than Jobserve which seems to simply have no jobs.
    It doesn't really serve much, either.

    Leave a comment:


  • SussexSeagull
    replied
    I know people, me being one of them, enjoying the contractor lifestyle of new challenges and avoiding office politics but ultimately it is a way of paying the mortgage and rates going through the floor is just going to push the better people into permanent roles to either weather the storm or see them out until retirement where they can enjoy paid time off and other benefits.

    The HMRC will get what they wanted. It's just they should have been careful what they wished for.

    Leave a comment:


  • hairymouse
    replied
    Originally posted by tjccjt01 View Post

    LinkedIn job search is hot garbage. It ignores keywords in searches and makes up skills that aren't in your CV when generating results.
    This is so true, not only does it ignore your keywords, it seem to ignore any filters you set (permie or contract). It also allows you to click "don't show me this again" and then merrily show it to you on the next search.

    Then there's the multiple "women in coding" and LGBTQ alliance roles. Should I even bother applying for those if I'm not a woman or gay?

    The whole thing is an absolute mess, but slightly better than Jobserve which seems to simply have no jobs.

    Leave a comment:


  • GJABS
    replied
    Originally posted by edison View Post
    At this rate, contractors will soon be paying the client £200 a day for the privilege of coming to work .
    Well indeed one option open to some of us with savings, might be to buy into an existing business who uses our skills. Not without risk of course.

    Leave a comment:


  • edison
    replied
    Originally posted by gables View Post
    I don't normally get these types of emails, mainly because I don't do any recruitment I'd imagine.... anyway just received this from a recruiter:
    I know you may not have any active requirements currently, but I just wanted to reach out as over the last 2 weeks I have worked a number of roles within the Support & Infrastructure space so I have multiple, pre-qualified, immediately available candidates for the below jobs roles.

    Help Desk Technician - £150p/day
    Technical Support Specialist - £200p/day
    IT Support Analyst - £250p/day
    Network Architect - £350p/day
    Security Engineer - £300p/day
    Desktop Support Technician - £200p/day
    Infrastructure Engineer - £275p/day
    Site Reliability Engineer - £350p/day
    IT Manager - £300p/day
    Infrastructure Manager - £300p/day

    All day rates stated above are all-inclusive of our recruitment fees and you can utilise the services of these contractors for a long or as little as you like and you have the right to cancel their services immediately.

    I've done a lot of recruitment for some clients in the past. Had a few of these speculative emails recently along the lines of asking whether I've firmed up plans for 2025 yet and how the recruiter would be happy to solve all my resource problems.

    IT Manager at £300 a day all in? £250 a day would only get you a new grad BA just 2-3 years ago. At this rate, contractors will soon be paying the client £200 a day for the privilege of coming to work <cue Four Yorkshiremen sketch>.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bluenose
    replied
    Originally posted by willendure View Post

    Do you do keep changing job titles on LI? I was doing that to match my CV. Its the main reason I got fed up with LI because I felt I had to constantly tweak it to tell the same story as my CV. Can't be bothered with that - if I need to I will put something a bit generic like Consultant Software Engineer.
    No, I re-alignment my titles and skill tags when LI did an upgrade about 2 years ago and have not touched them since, only to add new tags to 2 contracts I completed (1 add per 12 months). In my field there was a re-alignment in titles but other titles were more deeply affected when Scaled AGILE became a thing.

    Leave a comment:


  • willendure
    replied
    Originally posted by Bluenose View Post

    Make sure you have your Linked-in tags setup with right right search terms and tweak your job titles to suit.
    Do you do keep changing job titles on LI? I was doing that to match my CV. Its the main reason I got fed up with LI because I felt I had to constantly tweak it to tell the same story as my CV. Can't be bothered with that - if I need to I will put something a bit generic like Consultant Software Engineer.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bluenose
    replied
    Originally posted by Smartie View Post
    Ah statistics.
    While the market is pretty terrible, the number of roles with 'developer' in the job title might not correlate exactly to the number of developer type roles.

    For instance, it seems that 'Software Engineer' roles have become a lot more popular recently (below) - 50% of the number of 'Developer' roles.

    The job used to be 'Programmer' but not many advertised roles for that these days - worth expanding your searches perhaps as trends in job titles do change.
    I can't upvote this post enough. Make sure you have your Linked-in tags setup with right right search terms and tweak your job titles to suit.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bluenose
    replied
    Originally posted by SchumiStars View Post
    WTF is wrong with me?

    I am security cleared, Oxford Grad who has 25yrs of development experience in Java and .Net.

    What have I got to do to get a contract, I have been looking for nearly 2yrs now. FFS.
    Some of us lost everything during COVID.

    Your path is not a lonely one, its literally a routlette wheel of luck. Yes, some people on here make their own luck but chance plays a big part.

    If you want a job right now it seems Texas and the surrounding states is the place to be in 2024/2025.

    Cold comfort for Brit IT workers but the enormous influx of people every year wont be helping, the economy is not growing fast enough to absorb everyone.

    Leave a comment:


  • gables
    replied
    I don't normally get these types of emails, mainly because I don't do any recruitment I'd imagine.... anyway just received this from a recruiter:
    I know you may not have any active requirements currently, but I just wanted to reach out as over the last 2 weeks I have worked a number of roles within the Support & Infrastructure space so I have multiple, pre-qualified, immediately available candidates for the below jobs roles.

    Help Desk Technician - £150p/day
    Technical Support Specialist - £200p/day
    IT Support Analyst - £250p/day
    Network Architect - £350p/day
    Security Engineer - £300p/day
    Desktop Support Technician - £200p/day
    Infrastructure Engineer - £275p/day
    Site Reliability Engineer - £350p/day
    IT Manager - £300p/day
    Infrastructure Manager - £300p/day

    All day rates stated above are all-inclusive of our recruitment fees and you can utilise the services of these contractors for a long or as little as you like and you have the right to cancel their services immediately.


    Leave a comment:


  • dsc
    replied
    Originally posted by willendure View Post
    Damn. Went after a nice looking contract, but turned out to be something with someone already at the org lined up to take it, but they have to advertise any way because of procurement rules. Waste of my time, and I polished up my CV for it too.

    Maybe whoever is getting promoted, will leave a space behind for me..?

    Recruiter says the last year has been bad seemed but optimistic that things are turning? My expectation is that its not going to improve quickly.
    There's loads of those job ads around and it's the same story every time, it's internal hires, but they have to advertise to tick all the boxes.

    As for being optimistic...well lets just say it's much easier on the mind to keep thinking things will change for the better. I'm sure they will at some stage, but I wouldn't say it's going to be any time soon.

    Leave a comment:

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