Consultant Issue
From a consultants point of view, my advice would be to have a discussion with the agency that placed you there. If the consultant is doing his job properly he should liaise with the client and discuss the issues. Fingers crossed this resolves any issues in the professional manner you are looking for. Our role as consultants is equally, if not more important once you have taken and started the job.
With regards to the unprofessional, empty threats of the client, this tells me he expected you not to like the role. Sounds like he wasn't being 100% honest. This is another area that the consultant should have covered with the client and yourself.
Have you been contacted by your consultant since?
Good Luck
Matthew Wilkinson
Contract Specialist
RMI Recruitment
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Reply to: Leaving a contract early - moral dilema?
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Previously on "Leaving a contract early - moral dilema?"
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You need to learn to spell, then say, "meh".Originally posted by tgardener View PostI should add, at this point, that during the interview, a Director told me that "...if you think that you might leave before the end then remember this is a small world and we WILL bump into one another..." Basically a not very well veiled threat.
So, leave.Originally posted by tgardener View PostSo, my dilemma:
I have another contract available, pays a slightly higher rate, closer to home. Performing (I think) closer activities to my skill set with (I know) much greater autonomy. I am VERY tempted to leave this contract (following the notice period) and move. What do you think? Would this be so wrong?
Boo
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I wonder why he felt the need to say that?Originally posted by tgardener View PostI should add, at this point, that during the interview, a Director told me that "...if you think that you might leave before the end then remember this is a small world and we WILL bump into one another..." Basically a not very well veiled threat.
Perhaps he's a bully? Perhaps he knew he was misrepresenting the job? Perhaps he knew he was paying below market rate and he'd had a few people walk on him? Perhaps he is a
Just wondering, like.
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If the discussion about leaving has already been initiated then the writing is on the wall.
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Why did he say that? Did he already expect you to leave before the end? Did he know the contract wasn't right for you? Does he often have contractors leaving early on him, and why would that be?Originally posted by tgardener View PostI should add, at this point, that during the interview, a Director told me that "...if you think that you might leave before the end then remember this is a small world and we WILL bump into one another..." Basically a not very well veiled threat.
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It is easy for us just to say go. We don't have to deal with supplier and the feeling of personal guilt or whatever it is you get in this situation. What is right for the business and how it makes you feel are two diff things.
It does look pretty straightfoward as everyone says but it isn't nice isn't it. There have been threads like this before and people will steam and say just leave, nut up and shut up but I certainly don't find it easy even if it is black and white..
Why not invoke your right of substitution. If it makes you feel better find someone that can do your role and when you say you are going, introduce the new guy and sing his praises. Tell client it wasn't the role you expected and the new guy would be much better fit. It is possible you could actually make the client happy if you managed to pull it all together and everyone wins.
Anyhow, looks like you know which choice is the right one so good luck...
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^ WTS.
Oh, and ignore what the Director said - sounds like a jumped up little oik trying to come across as hard.
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Thats what notice periods are for, if you hand your notice in and work it then from your point of view you have done everything in accordance with the contract correctly in regards to leaving!
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Agreed, I don't see this is a moral dilemma, but a business one. The only thing that I would consider is the veiled threat, which only you can evaluate.Originally posted by doodab View PostNot at all. Explain you feel this isn't the role you interviewed for and work your notice. All seems fair to me.
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Not at all. Explain you feel this isn't the role you interviewed for and work your notice. All seems fair to me.Originally posted by tgardener View PostHi,
I'm having a dilema that I need someone with a different perpective.
I applied, interviewed and presented for a 6 month contract as a Vendor Manager with a Tech Manufacturer (1 hour commte from home). During the interview I demonstrated how I worked, my approach, how I work with suppliers to get the best from them and was given very positive feedback. Indeed I was offered the role before I had left the car park. However...I have been here two weeks and it has transpired that the role is very different from the one I thought I was walking into. Still working in a back-office function, but the role is a task-based role, not a strategic one; a role which requires me to be "..at your desk all the time...", "...you won't need to visit suppliers..." all the reverse of how I left the interview.
Now it could be thought that I ran a bad interview, didn't ask the right questions, my counter-argument to that is the fact I presented my approach. The way I work. I'm not sure I could have been clearer. I am not happy here - at all.
I should add, at this point, that during the interview, a Director told me that "...if you think that you might leave before the end then remember this is a small world and we WILL bump into one another..." Basically a not very well veiled threat.
So, my dilemma:
I have another contract available, pays a slightly higher rate, closer to home. Performing (I think) closer activities to my skill set with (I know) much greater autonomy. I am VERY tempted to leave this contract (following the notice period) and move. What do you think? Would this be so wrong?
Leave a comment:
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Leaving a contract early - moral dilema?
Hi,
I'm having a dilema that I need someone with a different perpective.
I applied, interviewed and presented for a 6 month contract as a Vendor Manager with a Tech Manufacturer (1 hour commte from home). During the interview I demonstrated how I worked, my approach, how I work with suppliers to get the best from them and was given very positive feedback. Indeed I was offered the role before I had left the car park. However...I have been here two weeks and it has transpired that the role is very different from the one I thought I was walking into. Still working in a back-office function, but the role is a task-based role, not a strategic one; a role which requires me to be "..at your desk all the time...", "...you won't need to visit suppliers..." all the reverse of how I left the interview.
Now it could be thought that I ran a bad interview, didn't ask the right questions, my counter-argument to that is the fact I presented my approach. The way I work. I'm not sure I could have been clearer. I am not happy here - at all.
I should add, at this point, that during the interview, a Director told me that "...if you think that you might leave before the end then remember this is a small world and we WILL bump into one another..." Basically a not very well veiled threat.
So, my dilemma:
I have another contract available, pays a slightly higher rate, closer to home. Performing (I think) closer activities to my skill set with (I know) much greater autonomy. I am VERY tempted to leave this contract (following the notice period) and move. What do you think? Would this be so wrong?Tags: None
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