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Previously on "how long do you typically stay on a contract?"
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Originally posted by jmo21 View Post
Current place, very well known public sector, can't hire people like me because of low salary bands. Some disguised permies been here 5 or 6 years.
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Originally posted by CoolCat View Postbut without a long term perm headcount. sometimes they simply cannot get anyone to take the job perm, and so it can be very long term as a contractor.
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sometimes you are genuinely just bringing something they need for a few days or weeks, to cover a gap in their knowledge, or maybe they just want a fresh set of eyes to look at an issue, or troubleshoot. sometime you are covering a peak in their work which they cannot cope with internally. sometimes its a longer term project that they want doing, but without a long term perm headcount. sometimes they simply cannot get anyone to take the job perm, and so it can be very long term as a contractor.
all are valid.
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Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
And yes it was clearly the client who was stupid.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
I'm guessing 'them' instead of 'him' answers the question. I don't think SE is young enough to be using them/they pronouns for people.
And yes it was clearly the client who was stupid.
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Originally posted by ensignia View Post
Them being the client or the developer?
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Originally posted by edison View PostI once had a perm job where a couple of contractors had been there around 10-12 years. Yesterday whilst discussing IR35 with a colleague at a new gig, he mentioned someone he had worked with a few years back had been at one client for 15 years. Can anyone beat that?
I'd been there 4.5 years but one guy (who was a developer and had written a lot of the systems) had been there 14 years.
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostI believe that Gary Lineker is a contractor and he's been with the BBC since around 1995...
https://www.ftadviser.com/regulation...-9m-ir35-case/
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I believe that Gary Lineker is a contractor and he's been with the BBC since around 1995...
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Originally posted by edison View PostI once had a perm job where a couple of contractors had been there around 10-12 years. Yesterday whilst discussing IR35 with a colleague at a new gig, he mentioned someone he had worked with a few years back had been at one client for 15 years. Can anyone beat that?
Kind of made sense as he had no mortgage, lived locally and didn't want any management responsibility.
The same company put contractors on courses for new technology though.
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