i.e. Ensure each contract is not one you are unable to walk away from so when tulip happens you can walk or start looking for other work without being scared of losing your job or looking bad at performance reviews for a 1% pay rise or career ladder prospects. You will also feel more free to stick to your deliverables in a reasonable way, declining anything that feels too unreasonable without proper discussion of why that approach is necessary. If it's just some newbie trying to make his presence felt then don't get dragged into their games. You're only stuck at the client for however long your notice period is and sometimes that is zero. With a big enough 'warchest' to fall back on stress is for permies.

Ignore any chat unless it's directly to you, it may all just be permie chinese whisper bollox around the water cooler. Worry what those responsible for your contract and timesheet approval are saying, they're the only ones that matter as long as you're delivering what was agreed and can prove it by keeping notes/emails of everything that happens. You can then hand them over if you decide to walk, to backup your reasons why, which may prevent you from totally burning the bridge with the client so could potentially return in future when this PM has moved on.
If it's all not that bad then just 'keep calm and carry on invoicing'.

More to the point, if the new PM is a contractor, they need a slap and a reminder about what the differences between being a contractor and being a perm are.
Leave a comment: