I have been on secondment to Company B for 4 1/2 Years, and am now one of the main engineers
Company A has won a big contract and also has a lot of work on and they are now thinking about breaking the secondment contract with company B.
1) Do I accept every thing and move back to Company A.
or
2)Become staff at Company B ( Think they might offer that), and and wee off Company A.
If I choose Option 1 then I have a nice commute, earn same as i'm on now, possible work away a bit more (nature of my work), also though there
is no promotion options at the moment so I get stuck in a rut.
[Edited on 22/808/12 by mad4x4]
[Edited on 22/808/12 by mad4x4]
2 hours more (the difference between the 2 jobs) travelling a day, 5 days a week? extra 10 hours travelling a week, the cost of that must be more than
the extra 5 hours a week work you do?
I'd go back to job A myself i think, assuming the job itself is the same, but don't burn bridges with job B, you might like them to remember
you IF things don't got well with A
I know that 3 hours commute would wee me off.
I also think that with hard work and diligence even a job with no prospects can become a job with prospects. If its a small family business even
better because you can carve a position for yourself and get noticed.
Thats what I did. I work in a company that designs/builds signs and exhibitions. I started working in the print room but I pushed and pushed the
exhibition design side harder and harder. Now I run my own design department with 2 full time staff and I own 2.5% of the business. Not much but if
the MD sold it for 10mill I'd be laughing. Took nine years though.....
Back to 'A'
I have read your post thoroughly and it seems to me that you have answered your own question by writing it down... option 1, which for what it is worth would be my choice, less travel costs, more of your own time and regarding promotion things can change.
I don't know whether this would apply, but if I was in a similar situation for the employer I am with, I wouldn't be legally able to work
for company B within six months of leaving company A. There are very strict 'poaching' terms and conditions in our contracts, as we do work
for some very large companies who are in very similar businesses.
But even if you can legally do it, it sounds like staying with company A would work better.
I would go with plan 5,,,,,,
And go to the pub for a pint.
But don't burn any bridges on the way.
find out what company b are paying company a. then ask for that as paye at company b, if they go for it you will get option 3 without the risk. if
they say no drop to option 3. if company b dont go for either option go back to company A.
if company b want you that bad they will pay up. it's always better to barter for maximum pay when ever you get the opportunity at the
beginning as its like getting blood out of a stone once your are an employee. other terms and conditions are much easier to haggle for than money
once you are working there full time.
[Edited on 22/8/2012 by ashg]
Personally I'd go with Option 1. I would say though that I don't think this a moral issue, it's purely financial. This sort of thing happens all the time - you have to look after Number 1. If you can do this without upsetting anyone then clearly it's nicer. I have one of my staff seconded to another firm at the moment. I made the other firm sign a contract stating that if they poach him we'll be compensated.
I hope company B or company A doesn't ever come on this forum - with the info supplied it wouldn't be hard for them to figure out what you
are on about, and if its commercially sensitive info you might end up with neither job.
In regards to the actual question - I leanred a long time ago, when it comes to business and job decisions, morals only work one way - dont get
stiffed.
[Edited on 22/8/12 by Dangle_kt]
Just remember that as a contractor you will need to earn about twice as much as you would as a PAYE employee - you have 2 lots of NI to pay (employees
and employers), sick leave and holiday time has to be paid out of your own earnings, plus more personal time to look after your books in order to keep
HMRC happy. Oh - and annual accountants fees. And less secure employment...
I speak from experience... an employer who values you, steady pay and a short commute have a high value in my book...
quote:
Originally posted by Dangle_kt
I hope company B or company A doesn't ever come on this forum - with the info supplied it wouldn't be hard for them to figure out what you are on about, and if its commercially sensitive info you might end up with neither job.