Originally posted by bobspud
View Post
So I am sick because I actually like complex commutes because I get time to reflect and listen to music. I also work from home a lot too so my life is balanced quite well. So taking a job 3 hours away would never put me off. Are you due a renewal any time soon? How far into the current project are you?
A few things you should consider when an agent picks up a phone and tells you how great their role is...
1) Some people in life are good at starting ideas and others are far better at finishing them, or turning them from a vision into reality. Which are you? This matters because you need to decide if you can hand over your current work and walk away knowing that someone else will finish it better than you could. Or if you are the driving force behind the success of what you are currently doing. Of you are the former it changes the rules a bit because you can set the vision and flee.
1) When an agent calls you, at that point they have not got any money but want it. Meanwhile you are already earning and providing wealth for someone else. So they need a hook to dislodge you. 9 times out of 10 that will be a lie about how great their new project is and what it does for you. Anyone that is reading this can think back to the last 20 calls any agent made and know that none of them started with "Hey we have this really nasty role where the permies are all infighting over getting the next best technology on their CV and everyone feels compelled to sit at a desk looking busy for 12 hours a day..."
2) What is the length of your current role likely to be if you stay with your current client? compare that with what you will gain if you get to the new place and you have to make another improvised jump.
3) Most importantly after you complete this current project and role off site, do you see yourself taking further years of repeat business from of your current client? Would you want to do the same with the new guys? Sometimes being a stable pair of hands will pay dividends. (I wouldn't know, I do brutal change where clients don't have the will to do it for themselves. So my capital is always spent when I roll off site, but many guys out there do more subtle work that gets them 2 months here or there in the background for years)
Technology changes but I am finding far more of the "set up design standards" or "Really good in front of a client" parts of my CV are taking over despite being in Cloud technology and it being about the fads.
So decide how your CV looks from a business point of view and decide if bouncing out mid contract will help your CV or hinder it because the only person that gains in this situation was the shark that called you...
A few things you should consider when an agent picks up a phone and tells you how great their role is...
1) Some people in life are good at starting ideas and others are far better at finishing them, or turning them from a vision into reality. Which are you? This matters because you need to decide if you can hand over your current work and walk away knowing that someone else will finish it better than you could. Or if you are the driving force behind the success of what you are currently doing. Of you are the former it changes the rules a bit because you can set the vision and flee.
1) When an agent calls you, at that point they have not got any money but want it. Meanwhile you are already earning and providing wealth for someone else. So they need a hook to dislodge you. 9 times out of 10 that will be a lie about how great their new project is and what it does for you. Anyone that is reading this can think back to the last 20 calls any agent made and know that none of them started with "Hey we have this really nasty role where the permies are all infighting over getting the next best technology on their CV and everyone feels compelled to sit at a desk looking busy for 12 hours a day..."
2) What is the length of your current role likely to be if you stay with your current client? compare that with what you will gain if you get to the new place and you have to make another improvised jump.
3) Most importantly after you complete this current project and role off site, do you see yourself taking further years of repeat business from of your current client? Would you want to do the same with the new guys? Sometimes being a stable pair of hands will pay dividends. (I wouldn't know, I do brutal change where clients don't have the will to do it for themselves. So my capital is always spent when I roll off site, but many guys out there do more subtle work that gets them 2 months here or there in the background for years)
Technology changes but I am finding far more of the "set up design standards" or "Really good in front of a client" parts of my CV are taking over despite being in Cloud technology and it being about the fads.
So decide how your CV looks from a business point of view and decide if bouncing out mid contract will help your CV or hinder it because the only person that gains in this situation was the shark that called you...
Leave a comment: