Originally posted by Spike
There could be many reasons for that: such as, hourly-paid jobs are lower-grade; some daily-rated contracts may expect you to work 12-15 hours as necessary; the sample is so small that you can't tell anything....
As for the "market stats average" being higher than any job you can find, I see that too. That's probably because the market stats come from an analysis of keywords. For example, "unix" shows an average daily rate of £416. That means, if anything, that the average of all ads that used the word "unix", and quoted a daily rate, was 416. It is hell and gone from implying that, with the word "unix" on your CV, you can step out and get £416 a day.
As we used to say in the lab, the disparity between the figures gives a good indication of the experimental error involved.
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