Originally posted by alreadypacked
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Reply to: Are you a proper contractor?
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Previously on "Are you a proper contractor?"
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Originally posted by original PM View PostInterestingly enough most of my perm jobs seem to last about 5 years
first 2 years - getting to know the job and the people - can be quite fun
next 2 years - climbing the greasy poll as evident skills and talent come to the fore - get loads a money!
last year being managed out of the business because you are starting to make your boss look like a clueless bell end due to obvious talent and an unwillingness to kiss ass.
ok you do not get the extra cash you do with contracting - but also you do not get the stress of no contract/bench time/running company accounts etc etc etc
so looks like another 4.5 years in my current job then....
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Originally posted by Spacecadet View PostCheck my sig for my thoughts on Plan B
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostI had the same view for many years but I find it too difficult to balance contracting, retraining, kids & plan B's.
My longterm is to ditch plan B's and combine the first two into a perm role, preferably in a consultancy or internal BI team. That way I get the best of all of them,
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Originally posted by Spacecadet View PostThe projects I work on (which is dictated by the type of work I do) have a 6 month core development life span, after that it moves into change request/support territory which is the point at which I get itchy feet and need to hand over to the permies.
The longer contracts I've had have been combinations of smaller projects, again about 6 months each
I don't concentrate on a specific sector... I've been in healthcare, retail, manufacturing, government agency, publishing and telecoms in the past 4 years
My longterm is to ditch plan B's and combine the first two into a perm role, preferably in a consultancy or internal BI team. That way I get the best of all of them,
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Originally posted by Spacecadet View PostThe projects I work on (which is dictated by the type of work I do) have a 6 month core development life span, after that it moves into change request/support territory which is the point at which I get itchy feet and need to hand over to the permies.
The longer contracts I've had have been combinations of smaller projects, again about 6 months each
I don't concentrate on a specific sector... I've been in healthcare, retail, manufacturing, government agency, publishing and telecoms in the past 4 years
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostHave another cake fatty and leave the posting to the grown ups.
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Originally posted by alreadypacked View PostMaybe you should think about moving into a new area, work wise or client wise. Have you thought about changing sectors. I think different industries attract certain types, but 6 months is a bit too short maybe you are just picking the wrong jobs.
The longer contracts I've had have been combinations of smaller projects, again about 6 months each
I don't concentrate on a specific sector... I've been in healthcare, retail, manufacturing, government agency, publishing and telecoms in the past 4 years
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Originally posted by alreadypacked View PostWho cares what you think.
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Originally posted by suityou01 View PostLike the mercenary, money hungry, Sasguru.
Or just biding your time until the dream permy gig comes along?
Is the latter just deluding themselves? Or the former?
Poll follows.
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostI give this thread 2 out of 10!
NEXT!!!!!!!!!
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Originally posted by Spacecadet View PostGot agree with all of that, except for the 2 years part. Generally I find 6 months is enough for me to start wanting to leave.
Spent 18 months on one contract, mitigated by the fact that I spent 9 months on one site and the other 9 else where.
Just to add to the list:
I am never worried in the slightest about having a contract terminated early or not getting an extension
I never have to think about getting a "pay rise" or a promotion
Every new contract means a clean slate and an opportunity to do things better
I know that in 6 months the annoying c**t I have to deal with on a daily basis will be nothing more than a tulip memory
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