Hey Guys!
Just saying hello to everyone. I'm quite happy to find this forum where I can possibly get some buddies and/or useful advice from seasoned mercenaries.
I'm another permie who decided to jump to the IT contractor vagon. I should have done it much earlier (I'm allergic to permie treatment) but IT contracting wasn't really popular in my country. Now I've been working in London for about a year and I've started reading about contracting details several times, spent days researching stuff reading contractoruk and mini-pdfs but I always got lost in the forest of taxation details and stuff like that. Still, I got a relatively good idea about how payment is structured, reasonable rates in my sector, IR35 problems, umbrella vs ltd, etc... But I'll never get into this if I don't jump into the deep water. I've registered here to fill in the gaps. Perhaps just for a kick in my ass along with some useful advices from members who once were in similar shoes.
My "short" intro and welcome ends here. Thanks for reading it up until this point. Now comes the boring part, only for people with strong nerves and a lot of patientce!
I'll list some more info and things that confuse me at the moment. Comments are welcome on any of them.
Should I just shut up, start forming the company and sending out applications to every relevant contract job ads as soon as possible?
Just saying hello to everyone. I'm quite happy to find this forum where I can possibly get some buddies and/or useful advice from seasoned mercenaries.
I'm another permie who decided to jump to the IT contractor vagon. I should have done it much earlier (I'm allergic to permie treatment) but IT contracting wasn't really popular in my country. Now I've been working in London for about a year and I've started reading about contracting details several times, spent days researching stuff reading contractoruk and mini-pdfs but I always got lost in the forest of taxation details and stuff like that. Still, I got a relatively good idea about how payment is structured, reasonable rates in my sector, IR35 problems, umbrella vs ltd, etc... But I'll never get into this if I don't jump into the deep water. I've registered here to fill in the gaps. Perhaps just for a kick in my ass along with some useful advices from members who once were in similar shoes.
My "short" intro and welcome ends here. Thanks for reading it up until this point. Now comes the boring part, only for people with strong nerves and a lot of patientce!
I'll list some more info and things that confuse me at the moment. Comments are welcome on any of them.
- I'm a masochist and I'm going to start with an Ltd. (Later I want to do business anyway and I want to learn about this.) Maybe a bit stupid related question: Should I form the company now or I can leave it after securing a contract. Some sites suggest that forming a company and opening a business account is quick (if I wanted to postpone this). Although I wouldn't be sure about the speed of bank account creation based on my experience with my first UK bank account. On the other hand by forming it now and paying for a good account agency would help me to check contracts and I think I would seem to be more serious if I could respond to contract offers quickly (both verbally and officially).
- Can you recommend an agency? I thought about starting out with SJD. They are a bit pricey compared to some others but their services and unlimited accountant support might come in handy for a beginner.
- What do you think about IR35 insurance? For example the qdos one.
- Currently I'm not working (no notice period) and I have saved money for 3-4 months living in London (zone 2). I think this will help a lot in finding IT gigs. I can show up in London City within 30-60minutes. IT related pain points:
- I've done development in a lot of languages but the most relevant and fresh part of my ~10 year professional experience is about C/C++ projects that only partly overlap (backend/webservice development) with my current profile (python/django web). I've spent only the last year with django development (in London) as a permie on an in-house project so I don't have a personal public portfolio. How much problem will this cause? I'd still do great on an interview as mid-senior level django dev. Using my experience I've started putting together some smaller home projects that would demonstrate my django/tdd/web-api/angularjs skills but I'm not sure that I'll have the time to finish them and I'm not sure it is worth investing my time/energy in these.
- Seasoned contractors get their gigs through networking. I think getting first gig sucks for many people without contractor connections. Where do you think it's best to get my first python/django gigs? I don't think that my first gig should suck in terms of rate but I'm prepared to accept a below average one. In such cases I will probably take only shorter term (~3month) projects. Did you have useful similar strategy or some other related advices?
- Experience with freelancing vs in-office-contracting? Freelancing attracts me more but I'm afraid the lack of portfolio will attract in-office jobs more. I think I'll not care about IR35 status during my first contract.
- Either on ukcontractor or itcontractor I've read some bullfeces about people wearing fine clothes and suits on interviews. I hope it was only a joke and contracting won't change this part of my life for the worse...
Should I just shut up, start forming the company and sending out applications to every relevant contract job ads as soon as possible?
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