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Previously on "Your First Contracting Gig"

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  • XLMonkey
    replied
    Where was it? Ministry of Defence

    What were you doing? Project Management (actual role was keeping the project permies sane in an environment that had gone completely mad)

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    Barely noticed the difference

    What did you learn?
    1. Setting up a company is easy peasy. There is really nothing to
    it. Read the guides, set up a limited company. Ignore umbrellas and
    composites, if you are serious about doing it, they just cost you
    money for no real benefit.
    2. It is meaningless to ask the question "are there any good
    agencies?". It is irrelevant. All contract opportunities are
    advertised on one of three job sites (Jobserve.com, jobsite.co.uk,
    totaljobs.com).
    3. There are only good agents. They move agencies like butterflies.
    I have about 3 agents who have regularly passed relevant
    opportunities on to me, even though they have moved company twice or
    more in the past 12 months.
    4. There is no such thing as a contract that is inside IR35. Period.
    Again, read the manual and operate like a professional, there will
    not be a problem.
    5. Do not go contracting until you have cleared all non-mortgage debt
    and put aside c. 6 months of living costs. I had a reasonable cushion, but
    even so there were a few squeaky moments along the way.

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    I keep smelling it, and it's a nice Morrocan blend with just a hint of cinnamon... Lovely

    What were you doing before that first contract?
    working for a management consultancy

    Leave a comment:


  • n5gooner
    replied
    Where was it?
    Mellon Bank

    What were you doing?
    designing DR builds and testing

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    Easy. Setup my own support company, employed two support monkies, went of to a contract.

    What did you learn?
    how other peoples ideas can really screw a company when it comes to DR.

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    Not so far, never had a break when I didn't want one, and just got a renewal for a further 3 months where I am now.

    What were you doing before that first contract?
    Setting up my owen firm, then Bank of America for 5 years, then Bridge, then JP Morgan.....and they ask how you get into banking!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • wendigo100
    replied
    Where was it?
    Small computer company in Borehamwood

    What were you doing?
    Writing pointless manuals.

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    Easy. I'd just been made redundant.

    What did you learn?
    Lots about X25/X3/X28/X29 etc (well, this was late eighties/early nineties), and assembler programming

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    After three years there I had trouble getting my second contract and had to take one in Birmingham.

    What were you doing before that first contract?
    Permy systems development for a radar company

    Leave a comment:


  • lilelvis2000
    replied
    Lets seee.....Oh yeah Nortel in Ottawa. Migrating Application from Mac to Windows. Turned out quite nice. Learned that people who take the MCP? know diddly. Prior I was permie at Cognos.

    Leave a comment:


  • css_jay99
    replied
    Where was it? -- Bank of America

    What were you doing? -- oracle/ sqlserver Database design sql pl/sql, loading packgages, ETL, Datawarehouse, kissing ass

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract? -- Not too bad cos I was working for an old university room mate

    What did you learn? - compliance, too much meetings, learnt that i was wasted there but learnt sql server, kissing ass

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?

    What were you doing before that first contract? -- 7yrs permie within RBS

    Leave a comment:


  • bogeyman
    replied
    Where was it?
    Major oil company

    What were you doing?
    Moving a mainframe site in the UK back to US

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    Easily - was previously an employee of said oil co. I resigned and they begged me to come back on contract knowing full well they had nobody else who could remotely do the job.

    What did you learn?
    How much people fawn on you when you earn more than them. Esp. managers.

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    Not sure I understand this one! If you mean that I realised I had a valuable commercial skill, then yes - I 'smelled the coffee'.

    What were you doing before that first contract?
    Working as a sysprog manager.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheMonkey
    replied
    Where was it?
    Large design agency for large ex-BT mobile phone company.

    What were you doing?
    Sales tools

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    No problems. Some cash flow problems but otherwise ok.

    What did you learn?
    Sod all apart from how to avoid politics like the plague.

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    Dealing with S3 payroll.

    What were you doing before that first contract?
    Architect at quite well known Microsoft Gold Partner.

    Leave a comment:


  • DS23
    replied
    >Where was it?
    Global Manufacturing Corporation

    >What were you doing?
    Functional Consultancy

    >How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    It was a piece of cake. Work was the same as I had been doing for years.

    >What did you learn?
    1. That in the land of the blind the one eyed man is king.
    2. How to chill in the face of politics and garbage management decisions with an internalised kerching sound.
    3. I had a poor sense of smell.

    >Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    I should have smelt some fishy flavoured coffee at 2 months in when the payment schedule was ignored but I had seen some money and I wanted more of the same. I should have sniffed the aroma of ammonia again at month 4 and jumped to a different agent (or just walked away) but I kept hanging on thinking it would all come good. At month 7 I should have been snorting the stuff but instead I stuck my head in the sand and just withheld invoices and expenses because the end client made encouraging noises of support. Then at about 10 months the Agent went bankrupt and I knew the stench was real. I was covered in it! The end client legal dept put a stop to all the pleasant noises of support and I was looking at losing 60K. I had to buy myself out of the contract so that I could start a new one and present the withheld invoices through another agent. It was a freaking disaster of a first contract.

    >What were you doing before that first contract?
    PM for a Global Manufacturing Corporation.

    Leave a comment:


  • paulb567
    replied
    Where was it?
    Large pharmaceuticals company

    What were you doing?
    Straight forward software development.

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    Easy. The work was relaxed. Working with a mixture of permies and contractors all of who pulled their weight on the project.

    What did you learn?
    How to surf the internet for 7 hours a day and get paid for it.

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    No. The contract was loads easier than my previous permy jobs.

    What were you doing before that first contract?
    2.5 years of permy development after leaving uni.

    Leave a comment:


  • lukemg
    replied
    Where was it?
    Bass Ltd, huge brewery, cape hill, brum

    What were you doing?
    2nd line monkey support work (when this was considered a skill - 93/94)

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    They had had another chap in for a week who annoyed everyone he met so they got rid of him the day I started (they kept me in another office till he left, told him budget had gone). Just in case I was the same, I was on a days notice for 2 weeks.
    Had to live away but money had doubled to 700/week (I know but this is years ago) so lived with it. Shift was easy, kept my head down, got on with everyone (boss offered to lend me a few hundred notes if my money was delayed in coming through !)

    What did you learn?
    Equal priority is they want you to get on with everyone and be able to do the job. I concentrate on being the perfect chap on the team, I am on time, nice to people, I don't moan about the place, I don't go sick, I don't have time off to look after kids, dentists etc etc. I am LOW maintenance and it works. Skills required have always been basic and no more than the permies.

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    Had to setup co, get business account, do paperwork (before t'internet) after I had started the job, had a mate who's dad was an accountant. Got done for 20% by the agency but it went smooth apart from that.

    What were you doing before that first contract?
    4 years permie on network/PC support role (on my own = you learn a lot but not about team working)

    Leave a comment:


  • teabag
    replied
    Went contract after getting made redundant three times in a row!! No such thing as a permanent job, just longer contracts on worse rates...

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Originally posted by Spacecadet
    my ff key is broken
    Most important key for this forum...

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Originally posted by Lucifer Box
    professionalism

    HTH
    Fleetwood
    my ff key is broken

    Leave a comment:


  • Lucifer Box
    replied
    professionalism

    HTH
    Fleetwood

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Fair enough

    Where was it?
    Software co. too recent to say where

    What were you doing?
    T-SQL Development and some SQL Server Admin

    How did you cope with the shift from perm to contract?
    Badly, was at a good point in my career to change just a very bad time in my personal life for it. Found it difficult to give 100% focus to the task in hand.

    What did you learn?
    Contracting does require a bit more proffessionalism than being a permie... and to never work for a software co. again (me and them just don't mix)

    Was there a point where you had to smell strong contractor coffee?
    Agency decided to screw me on payment terms, i had to screw them back harder before my bank account hit the rocks.

    What were you doing before that first contract?
    5 years permie on Development, DBA and Sysadmin on CRM and financials systems

    Leave a comment:

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