Originally posted by PCTNN
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Reply to: Running back to permie land
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Previously on "Running back to permie land"
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Originally posted by sira View PostThat's not so bad! Ours is reviewed weekly. Might start logging my piss breaks
Every time I had to go to the loo and take a sh1te I logged it in under the "personal development" category
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Originally posted by PCTNN View PostI've experienced most of those negative things you list, but not all in the same role. Sounds like a nightmare company to work for. That is so rubbish, I'd run for the hills as well if I was in your situation. Would you care sharing what sector this company is in?
I accepted a permie role for one of the companies I had already worked for, so at least I know what I'm going to find. It's actually the only company I've always said I would ever consider going back to
Originally posted by coolhandluke View PostWe have also been asked to log our time on a spreadsheet. Request arrives the middle of the month so for two weeks we have to guess what we will spend each hour of the day doing.
Spreadsheet is distilled into a cell on a powerpoint pack and probably ignored.
Got to love being perm!
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Originally posted by sira View PostNot really the salary as I'm aware salaries are depressed everywhere at the moment.
I wouldnt really describe it as mindset but moreso the rubbish that comes along with it, such as:
- very poor working practices
- monthly probation meetings / weekly one-to-ones
- heavy surveillance
- micro-management
- politics
- game playing
- a4se licking
- my current firm is a large one and they're making us log our daily acitivties
- 3 month notice period (after probation)
- everyones been told no bonus for minimum 3 years
Covid has eroded working practices too, so its a total living nightmare. You know its bad when you'd rather be unemployed during a pandemic or on the dole!
Unrelated to question but at my firm there are staff who have covid and theyre still being made to work whilst their managers laugh it off. Utterly dispicable stuff. Has to be some kinda criminal offence...no humanity left. The corporate world was already bad but covid has turbo-charged it into a whole new monster.
Spreadsheet is distilled into a cell on a powerpoint pack and probably ignored.
Got to love being perm!
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Originally posted by sira View PostNot really the salary as I'm aware salaries are depressed everywhere at the moment.
I wouldnt really describe it as mindset but moreso the rubbish that comes along with it, such as:
- very poor working practices
- monthly probation meetings / weekly one-to-ones
- heavy surveillance
- micro-management
- politics
- game playing
- a4se licking
- my current firm is a large one and they're making us log our daily acitivties
- 3 month notice period (after probation)
- everyones been told no bonus for minimum 3 years
Covid has eroded working practices too, so its a total living nightmare. You know its bad when you'd rather be unemployed during a pandemic or on the dole!
Unrelated to question but at my firm there are staff who have covid and theyre still being made to work whilst their managers laugh it off. Utterly dispicable stuff. Has to be some kinda criminal offence...no humanity left. The corporate world was already bad but covid has turbo-charged it into a whole new monster.
I accepted a permie role for one of the companies I had already worked for, so at least I know what I'm going to find. It's actually the only company I've always said I would ever consider going back to
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Originally posted by Fraidycat View PostI would take all of that (including the a4se licking ) for £650 a day out side ir35, but no way for a perm role (especially one with no bonus)
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Originally posted by sira View Post- very poor working practices
- monthly probation meetings / weekly one-to-ones
- heavy surveillance
- micro-management
- politics
- game playing
- a4se licking
- my current firm is a large one and they're making us log our daily acitivties
- 3 month notice period (after probation)
- everyones been told no bonus for minimum 3 years
staff who have covid and theyre still being made to work whilst their managers laugh it off.Last edited by Fraidycat; 13 January 2021, 01:49.
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Originally posted by BigDataPro View PostIs it the salary or mindset that is making you quit?
I wouldnt really describe it as mindset but moreso the rubbish that comes along with it, such as:
- very poor working practices
- monthly probation meetings / weekly one-to-ones
- heavy surveillance
- micro-management
- politics
- game playing
- a4se licking
- my current firm is a large one and they're making us log our daily acitivties
- 3 month notice period (after probation)
- everyones been told no bonus for minimum 3 years
Covid has eroded working practices too, so its a total living nightmare. You know its bad when you'd rather be unemployed during a pandemic or on the dole!
Unrelated to question but at my firm there are staff who have covid and theyre still being made to work whilst their managers laugh it off. Utterly dispicable stuff. Has to be some kinda criminal offence...no humanity left. The corporate world was already bad but covid has turbo-charged it into a whole new monster.
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Originally posted by sira View PostI'm 4 months into a Permie role. I'm quitting soon and running for the hills.
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I'm 4 months into a Permie role. I'm quitting soon and running for the hills.
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Originally posted by PCTNN View PostI'm about to take the plunge and make a similar move to the OP.
After 2 years of contracting, that's me done and ready to head back to permie land.
2020 has been incredibly stressful, with a contract I didn't enjoy in the slightest, at a majorly disappointing client, seeing most of the contractors in my team, one by one either not getting renewed or being treated poorly and basically forced to quit, just to be replaced by incompetent junior permies.
I started a new contract this week, £300 a day inside ir35. I was making exactly double that amount 12 months ago, but that's what the very few available contract roles for my skillset pay nowadays.
Got offered a permie role for 50k a year, 10% bonus, 10% pension contributions, all the other usual benefits, totally remote now and then 4 days a week remote with the office 30 minutes away by car when things go back to "normal". The money is more than enough, the work is interesting enough, and the job is cushy enough for me to be able to focus more on the things that really matters (my family and my hobbies).
Maybe in 5-10 years I'll switch again.
I wish you the very best of luck.
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I'm about to take the plunge and make a similar move to the OP.
After 2 years of contracting, that's me done and ready to head back to permie land.
2020 has been incredibly stressful, with a contract I didn't enjoy in the slightest, at a majorly disappointing client, seeing most of the contractors in my team, one by one either not getting renewed or being treated poorly and basically forced to quit, just to be replaced by incompetent junior permies.
I started a new contract this week, £300 a day inside ir35. I was making exactly double that amount 12 months ago, but that's what the very few available contract roles for my skillset pay nowadays.
Got offered a permie role for 50k a year, 10% bonus, 10% pension contributions, all the other usual benefits, totally remote now and then 4 days a week remote with the office 30 minutes away by car when things go back to "normal". The money is more than enough, the work is interesting enough, and the job is cushy enough for me to be able to focus more on the things that really matters (my family and my hobbies).
Maybe in 5-10 years I'll switch again.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostCan't see that working well....
I agree with others that £300 p/d to £60K + benefits is probably a good move at this time.
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Have a
£60k perm in this environment is not to be sniffed at. In a few years time you may choose to go back contracting on a higher day rate, or not, but it's easier to make those decisions from a position of power
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