active questions tagged contracting - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-22T04:08:15Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/contracting http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1937754/switching-from-full-time-to-contract-finding-a-business-mentor 0 Switching from Full Time to Contract.. finding a business mentor [closed] flyfishr64 2009-12-21T01:27:47Z 2009-12-21T01:59:45Z <p>So it looks like I'm making the switch from full time employee to self-employed contractor due to the job market -- there's just not a lot of work in my area for C++ programmers. I'm working for what's euphemistically called a "body shop" at the moment and while that's paid the bills, it's not a long term solution at the current rates. </p> <p>I've got the technical chops to succeed as a self-employed contractor. What I'm lacking is the business acumen to <strong>do it right</strong>. I think a mentor in this area would be great, but I have no idea how to find one. </p> <p>So, SO users... what's the best way to proceed here, where can I find a mentor that can help me with the business development side here. I want someone that can help me decide if a sole proprietorship is good enough, or if I should be an LLC, or some other 'corporate' entity. Whether I should find a partner, things like that. I'm looking forward to your answers!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/48618/job-hopping-etiquette 13 Job hopping etiquette Paul Tomblin 2008-09-07T17:56:24Z 2009-12-18T03:48:12Z <p>I need to get out of a bad situation at my current work - I like the work, but they've been jerking me around with contract extensions coming at the last minute. I've been offered a job at a different company that doesn't look as interesting, but it's a chance to learn a few technologies I was interested in learning. It's "6 months contract to permanent" - does that mean that if I decide it's hopelessly boring and quit after the 6 month contract period that it won't reflect too badly on me and ruin my reputation in the town? What if I quit earlier than that?</p> <p><strong>Edit</strong> I should mention that I don't think there will be one right answer, so rather than accepting one answer, I'm going to vote up the good ones.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1907237/working-for-one-of-those-firms-that-contracts-developers-out 1 Working for one of those firms that contracts developers out? [closed] peacedog 2009-12-15T12:50:40Z 2009-12-15T13:44:07Z <p>I've been looking for a job for awhile now. The economy certainly hasn't helped the job search. I had some jobs come up (and I had some positions I submitted resumes for but I was passed on) but I started this job search being extremely picky.</p> <p>I have grown increasingly unhappy at my current job; I am stuck in a big rut and I don't feel I'm going to learn anything worthwhile being here (and haven't for some time). I'm tired of working on slapdash projects (our "latest" beauty was originally specced as a 5 month effort for a 3 man development team. That changed to "what can you do in 30 days" which was really "what can you do in about 18 days", and we did a decent job all things considered. But we apparently wound up missing the mark of what the users wanted, and now that app lies unused) and working for bumbling morons and petty assholes.</p> <p>I recently had a chat with a recruiter for one of those tech placement firms that hires people and then contracts them out. His branch is in a location I wouldn't mind moving to. In our talks I made it clear that I preferred full time work. I've never done contract work, and while I find them generally unfair I am a little worried about certain stereo-types I hear regarding contract work (it'll close the door on full time opportunities down the road, etc). But he said they often had people move into full time positions.</p> <p>I've got some followup questions for him floating around in my head, and I am keeping an open mind about going to work for his firm. Though I am going to turn down the first offered contract (a VB.net support position. Speaking of unfair stereo types, VB gets a bad rap and it's undeserved. Well. . . mostly. I lightly kid, VB folken of Stack Overflow.)</p> <p>I have 4 years of experience, but I'm starting to feel like I'm lagging behind where I ought to be. I work for an internal IT shop so I have duties beyond software development (nothing on the hardware side. But I write reports. Lots and lots of reports. Am I sick of writing reports? Can the Pope turn undead? Well, I don't know if he can, but I am sick of writing reports). I'm looking at ways to bolster my resume (which I'm starting to feel is flimsy) outside of work - interesting projects to work on and the like. But in the mean time, I'm starting to wonder if some time with this firm might be a good way to get more experience and diversify my resume (professionally I've done all web-app development. I got denied for resume submission by a recruiter for a winforms position recently, and that kind of ticked me off).</p> <p>So I'm interested in hearing what you folks think about working for this kind of company. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1469991/can-a-salaried-computer-programmer-manage-part-time-contracting 4 Can a salaried computer programmer manage part-time contracting? fakeaccount 2009-09-24T06:06:14Z 2009-12-14T21:17:05Z <p>I'm a salaried computer programmer, and I make a pretty good living at it. I've been thinking of supplementing my income by handling a few part-time, paid consulting opportunities. I'm worried, though, that tinkering on the side might burn me out, that it might affect my work, or that it might get me in trouble at work if they find out about it.</p> <p>I'm also wondering what to charge. Is there a rule of thumb I can use to turn salary $X into an hourly consulting rate? Let's say I make $50k as a programmer. I figure that translates into $25/hr, not including benefits. Should I ask for maybe 50% more than that for hourly consulting part-time? 100% more? If I made $100k/year, should I ask for $100/hr?</p> <p>Any advice from folks who have tried this sort of thing already? Am I just asking for trouble, or is this a great, go-getter sort of idea?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1853189/service-provider-vs-contractor 0 Service Provider vs Contractor jaywon 2009-12-05T19:31:16Z 2009-12-05T19:39:20Z <p>If I have set up a business as a sole proprietorship, registered as doing software development, can I "sell" my services(much like a mechanic) where I bill the client a total plus tax, as opposed to being a contractor/consultant and them paying me an hourly wage? </p> <p>I do all work at my own office, but sometimes that requires remotely maintaining/fixing a client's pre-existing code as opposed to building something from scratch every time.</p> <p>I know I should talk to a lawyer, and I probably will, but just looking for some shared experience from the community.</p> <p>Thanks!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1849588/are-developers-interested-in-community-development-on-commercial-projects 2 Are developers interested in "community development" on commercial projects ? [closed] Zak 2009-12-04T20:52:03Z 2009-12-04T20:52:03Z <p>Stack Overflow is a great way to have "community help" on programming questions. The entire model is free, and it adds value for everyone. You give and you get. </p> <p>What I'd like to know is, would the developer community here be interested in carrying this over into a model where you <em>could</em> be compensated as well for doing actual development work? I'm going to ramble a bit here, but I need to get it all out there so you can get a picture of what I'm really asking.</p> <p>First off, this question isn't asking anyone to work for me or anyone else on a free or speculative nature as you sometimes see on craigslist. This isn't a "that guy" thing, but rather just a general question. Specifically, would you as a developer be interested in having a place (maybe within Stack Overflow) where you could just log in, see a spec, code up a few portions of that spec, and get paid for it?</p> <p>What I've often found is that I will be offered a freelance project, and I don't want to just sit there and work on it in my spare time all by myself. But the 2-3 other developers I often do things with may be busy, so I end up just turning down the work so I can maintain my own sanity.</p> <p>In the past, I have gone on craigslist or guru.com and searched for other contractors who might be interested in subbing out for a portion. I've had success with that about 3 out of 20 times. The 3 times were awesome, and I still work with one of those guys on an regular basis today.</p> <p>But I thought alternatively, it would be very very cool to post a project spec, and let the community handle the project from start to finish including design, documentation and implementation. Ad hoc teams could spring up to work on components, and the Stack Overflow community could develop solid bonds between developers who work well together and make good teams. As developers we could naturally gravitate towards who our best team leads are as they would have the most successful projects. If we didn't (as developers) like working with one team, we could just jump over to another team and try them out. </p> <p>Also, I would guess that some large percentage of us here have jobs where we could occasionally post a project to the "community development teams" and be able to have our company pay a reasonable price to get the project done. The teams could/would already have a bit of reputation established just on the basis of their StackOverflow rep. Successful projects could additionally add to a "team rep" score.</p> <p>Personally, I would love to be able to do this. I think it would be great to be able to quickly elect a small team to work with, take a 2 week side project, get my part, code it, get paid, and be done. Even if it only netted me 300 bucks for side money at first, I would like being able to interact with lots of different people, without the stress of having to worry about a long term job, and get paid.</p> <p>That is the overview of the idea, so I'd like feedback please. What do you think? How could this work better? Would this be a good way for Joel and his team to highlight their FogCreek software for managing software projects? Is SO the right place for this? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1739553/how-do-you-find-outside-programming-help 1 How do you find outside programming help? tylerl 2009-11-16T01:02:39Z 2009-11-16T01:25:31Z <p>Where do you go to find high-quality outside development help? Alternately, if you are a high-quality independent developer, where do you go find projects to work on?</p> <p>I own a software and IT consulting and development company, and occasionally we get requests for projects that would require more resources than my team has to spare. My own experience with outside developers has been that despite their lofty endorsements, certifications, and accolades, the work they deliver is unusably poor.</p> <p>So, if you're a developer who really knows his craft, or a small business in search of a developer you can trust to do the job right (not just well enough to get paid), how do you meet up?</p> <p><strong>Please, don't post your contact information here.</strong> The question is about the way you find independent developers, not a call for bids or resumés.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/806298/short-contract-pay-rates-for-programmers-in-the-uk 3 Short contract pay rates for programmers in the uk? Stephen 2009-04-30T10:23:14Z 2009-11-11T16:30:24Z <p>I've been offered the chance to do some short contracts - less than two months as a self employed contractor in the UK. </p> <p>I like the idea of working on a variety of projects but what rates should I charge? What else should I know?</p> <p>Some details (thanks to commenters)</p> <ul> <li>I'm located in West London, </li> <li>My experience is mostly in digital libraries and associated technologies (5 years)</li> <li>I don't have Ltd Co, accountant, tax registration, etc. - do I need all these things? (In my current project I'm being put on as an employee and I think the rate is too low)</li> </ul> <p>The tools/technologies</p> <ul> <li>Python/Vizard </li> <li>Perl/FastCGI (Both are modifying existing systems)</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1274538/agile-development-contract-template-time-and-materials-with-variable-scope-and 7 Agile Development Contract Template - Time and Materials with Variable Scope and Cost Ceiling thunksalot 2009-08-13T20:59:04Z 2009-10-30T07:57:14Z <p>Peter Stevens has a great summary of different agile contract models on his blog. I've decided that I like one of them the best (<a href="http://agilesoftwaredevelopment.com/blog/peterstev/10-agile-contracts#TAM-vscc" rel="nofollow">Time and Materials with Variable Scope and Cost Ceiling</a>) for a project I'm initiating, but I can't find a sample contract or template for such a contract. Anyone know where I could find something like that?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1646764/reasonable-contract-rate-for-a-region-charlotte-nc 0 Reasonable Contract Rate for a Region (Charlotte, NC)? [closed] jsight 2009-10-29T21:44:25Z 2009-10-29T21:44:25Z <p>I'm trying to determine a reasonable contract rate for work with a previous employer (after-hours, on an emergency only basis). The departure was on friendly terms, so obviously fairness is pretty important.</p> <p>Are there any tools for determining the current market rate for contract labor in the area? Presumably these tend to be somewhat higher than permanent-full-time hourly rates?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/166588/how-to-become-a-programmer-for-hire 13 How to become a programmer for hire? Brian G 2008-10-03T12:34:20Z 2009-10-27T10:37:54Z <p>Anyone know how to successfully start your own business as a programmer for hire. Consultant or contractor or whatever you want to call it.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/666668/i-have-an-idea-for-a-great-piece-of-software-but-i-cant-code-where-do-i-start 5 I have an idea for a great piece of software, but I can't code. Where do I start? Rich Armstrong 2009-03-20T15:35:41Z 2009-10-26T15:11:58Z <p>We occasionally get approached by people who want someone to write software for them. They often take the form of:</p> <blockquote> <p>I have a great idea for a piece of software and I want to find someone to write it for me. I have money to fund a project. Can you help me?</p> </blockquote> <p>We are fully a "shrink-wrap" software firm, providing production software for purchase by the general public, not bespoke solutions. Thus, we don't really have experience with consulting or contracting companies. We don't want to shut these people down with "you got the wrong guy, pal!" When people write us, we like to help them.</p> <p>The question: If you were this person, with an idea and money, but not the knowledge to write it yourself, how would you go about finding someone to write your piece of software? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1607789/best-development-process-for-outsourcing-online 3 Best Development Process for Outsourcing Online Ben Breen 2009-10-22T14:49:34Z 2009-10-22T14:52:39Z <p>I’m having some terrible experiences trying to outsource development to people on websites such as ODesk and RentACoder.</p> <p>Small green-field apps seem generally ok (shoddy work is generally limited in impact), but it always turns to disaster when trying to get people to work with existing codebases.</p> <p>I’ve had a guy rated in the top 100 on RAC do blatantly awful things such as call into the UI from a non-UI thread. He couldn’t understand the problem, but his solution was to only run it in a release build as then seems to work.</p> <p>Has anyone nailed down a development process which works, and is not overly expensive?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1585945/where-to-find-small-programming-contracts-in-the-uk-if-possible 0 Where to find small programming contracts (in the UK if possible)? joshcomley 2009-10-18T20:27:46Z 2009-10-18T21:42:15Z <p>Is there a good site to use where I can find odd jobs for programming?</p> <p>I am talking about a bit of HTML here, some C# there - small apps and so on.</p> <p>"Nugget work", if you will!</p> <p><b>Edit:</b> Made it a community wiki because I don't feel there will be one super-right answer, there might be a bunch of good options suggested</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/320716/how-much-should-a-contractor-charge-as-a-day-rate 9 How much should a contractor charge as a day rate? Ciaran McNulty 2008-11-26T13:38:25Z 2009-10-08T11:29:02Z <p>I've spent my career in full-time employment in the UK, on an annual salary.</p> <p>I'm interested to know how contracting rates compare to salaries, specificially how to compare the two.</p> <p>Basically if someone would make a certain salary, what would they equivalently charge as a day rate?</p> <p>day rate * X = annual salary</p> <p>What is the X factor?</p> <p><strong>Edit:</strong> Some people have suggested that the X is 365, or something like (365*5/7 - holiday), but that doesn't seem to tally with the rates charged 'in the wild'.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1470285/is-it-ethical-legal-to-raise-the-rate-to-a-leaving-customer 3 is it ethical/legal to raise the rate to a leaving customer flybywire 2009-09-24T07:44:12Z 2009-10-05T11:25:56Z <p>I have been doing consulting for a customer at a low hourly rate with the purpose of building a long term business relationship.</p> <p>The work consisted in learning, maintaining and modifying a big code base. Part of the reason I charged a low rate was to amortize over time the cost of learning the code. I have been working for this customer for over two years on and off.</p> <p>Now the customer is leaving and wants me to pass knowledge to another contractor. (Apparently my low rate was not low enough).</p> <p>Is it legal and or ethical to raise the hourly rate for knowledge transfer and support hours for the new contractor? We have no long term contract. It is agreed that the software belongs to the customer so in theory (and not only in theory) he can take all the source code and have the new contractor learn it. I have already passed all the credentials to the production server and source control to the customer at his request.</p> <p>What do you think? How did you handle similar situations?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1384314/wpf-xaml-designer 0 wpf /xaml designer 935main 2009-09-05T21:36:45Z 2009-10-03T23:47:16Z <p>I'm looking for a good WPF/XAML designer to do some contract work, but I don't know where to find one. Where's the best place to find good XAML designers for hire?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/722411/traveling-contracting 3 Traveling Contracting Sublimemm 2009-04-06T17:28:22Z 2009-10-03T14:38:47Z <p>I am fresh out of College (graduated in December with BS in Comp Sci). I have been working for a very large (40,000+ employee) company for over two years. My job is as stable as anyone could hope for. However, I am always bored, they cannot keep us (developers) busy. I am thinking about apply at some local contracting companies and try out contracting. I have been told that I could make a lot more money as a contractor and even more if I was willing to travel. I have been told that as a contractor I would basically be constantly coding, no BS meetings about project charters and stage gates, and that I would learn more in a year than I would in 10 years at my current job (this I believe since we're using java 1.4 and our brand new laptops have windows 2000 on them... lol). I just want to know what to expect if I decided to go the contracting route, and if traveling is worth it. Since I don't have any kids and this seems like the best time to do something like this.</p> <p>What have been your experiences with contracting? How do the mechanics of travel as a contractor work (what is paid for, do you work 4 10 hour days... etc)? Will I really be <em>mostly</em> coding? Will I really gain valuable insight and knowledge of the IT world?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1511440/what-can-i-do-to-protect-myself-as-a-contractor 3 What can I do to protect myself as a contractor? [closed] Eli 2009-10-02T19:46:05Z 2009-10-02T20:02:23Z <p>Around two years ago, I worked as a freelance web contractor, doing all the server-side coding for various websites. I got all my jobs through a specific woman, who was getting paid by the websites and then paid me. It was working fine and I trusted the woman, but on a certain job I ended up with a client who continued to demand feature "adjustments" past the contracted hour length, which I put up with... until he started accusing me of taking my time on it, at which point I told him he should give more detailed user requirements beforehand if he wants the site done more quickly (I received only a short paragraph for an entire website).</p> <p>Long story short, the client got pissed off and I was kicked off the project (when it was about 1 hour from completion). The best part? The woman who was employing me refused to pay me anything until I made threats, at which point I finally received just $250, when I was supposed to be paid $800.</p> <p>All of the code for the site was on their server over FTP and was very clean and well-commented. I was lucky I got that $250, because truly I had no real threat I could make. I signed nothing.</p> <p>Now, back to now. I am again working as a contractor, but in a highly different situation with someone who I genuinely trust not to pull any fast stuff. I'm also getting paid as I go and I have an actual contract signed. But still I'm wondering what people typically do in these situations to keep themselves as safe as possible. No matter what, you appear to be relatively exposed as a contractor.</p> <p>So what are some things you can do?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1509944/legal-issues-with-providing-code-examples-to-potential-clients 2 Legal issues with providing code examples to potential clients? dsp 2009-10-02T14:41:41Z 2009-10-02T15:04:58Z <p>Hey,</p> <p>Does anyone have any input on the legal or ethical considerations involved with showing examples of my code to potential clients? It seems a bit shady to share code other clients paid for. What's the best approach? To scrub out any sensitive or identifying information? Is this something commonly done? </p> <p>Thanks!</p> <p><strong>Edit: A client has requested code samples. I wouldn't offer them up otherwise.</strong></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1485495/freelance-agreement-to-add-client-projects-to-public-portfolio 2 Freelance agreement to add client projects to public portfolio? Jakobud 2009-09-28T05:04:33Z 2009-09-28T05:14:45Z <p>First of all, this is not exactly a direct programming question, but you guys seem to be the best ones to ask.</p> <p>I'm a freelance software developer. I'd like to put together a publicly viewable portfolio of projects that I have worked on for clients, or a client list or something similar. Just something to display or describe my work on a webpage or something.</p> <p>My question: What type of agreement or contract do I need to have my client(s) sign in order for me to legally describe or display my work on a webpage or some other similar publicly visible portfolio? Or even if I want to simply display my client's name/logo in order to make it known that I do work for them. Is there a certain name for this type of contract?</p> <p>On a side note, obviously there are NDA's involved some of the time and in lots of cases displaying or describing projects publicly just isn't feasible. My question is only really in regards to clients who wouldn't mind the project being displayed publicly or at least even having their company name/logo on my webpage to display the fact that I do work for them.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1479812/big-companies-with-no-i-own-you-contract 4 Big companies with no "I own you contract"? [closed] DevDevDev 2009-09-25T22:19:23Z 2009-09-25T22:22:55Z <p>My current company has an "I own you contract" carefully concealed in the legalese. They have made it clear they WILL sue. As such I am moving away from startups and want to find a company that won't make me sign this bullshit.</p> <p>Do:</p> <pre><code>Microsoft Amazon Google Adobe </code></pre> <p>Make you sign that?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1473940/what-am-i-able-to-do-legally-when-im-unpaid-for-a-project-as-a-freelancer 8 What am I able to do legally when I'm unpaid for a project as a freelancer? rr 2009-09-24T20:23:40Z 2009-09-24T20:51:45Z <p>A company has me developing software on a contract basis. The software is for a client of the company. The project had been split into phases, with the client paying a portion of the total after the satisfactory completion of each phase. The software will be hosted by the company for the client (as a service) after the completion of the final phase.</p> <p>The client has approved and paid for the first few phases. The end of the final phase is in about two weeks. I, as the developer, have only been paid for phase 1 and only a small portion of phase 2 (the rest of the money that was received for phase 2 was spent elsewhere in the company). The company is not in good financial shape and I am afraid that I will not get what I'm owed.</p> <p>However, I am developing this software on a private server that only I have access to. Neither the company or the client have access to the server and cannot obtain the source code without me giving to them.</p> <p>I'm just curious as to what rights I have as a developer. Am I obligated to turn over the source code, even if I am not paid? What is the best approach for me to take? There is a chance that the client would do business with me personally if the company went under. Is there anything I need to watch out for?</p> <p>I have not signed any contract specific to this project. The only contract I have signed is a general 1099 when I began working with the company (I have worked on other projects for them, some of which I'm unpaid for as well). There has never been any discussion as to who is the "author" of the source code. I have not signed any non compete agreements.</p> <p>Any advice?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1466801/contractor-hourly-rate-based-on-consulting-rate 1 contractor hourly rate based on consulting rate contractor rate 2009-09-23T15:35:59Z 2009-09-24T07:04:43Z <p>I am considering working for a consultant that charges a known rate, lets say $100/hour. As a contractor working for the consultant, what hourly rate should I expect?</p> <p>Edit:</p> <ul> <li>This could become a permanent source of work.</li> <li>It is mostly Rails work.</li> <li>I do know that the business overhead is low - everyone works from home with their own equipment.</li> <li>I am not adding skills the consultant or his current contractors don't already have.</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1395821/how-to-negotiate-with-a-recruiter 1 How to negotiate with a recruiter? [closed] Gabriel 2009-09-08T19:19:48Z 2009-09-13T16:17:25Z <p>What's the trick to making a recruiter's best interest be to get me the highest rate possible from his client? </p> <p>Certainly he deserves a significant commission for finding me, the job, and matching the two, but currently it seems the following is happening:</p> <ol> <li>Recruiter negotiates a high fee to his customer for my services (and keeps that number quiet)</li> <li>Recruiter "hires" me as a W2 contractor then talks me down on my rate ("ah, we're competing with overseas, it's such a tight market, blah blah blah")</li> </ol> <p>At any rate, how do I change his interests be to negotiate a high contract rate on my behalf?</p> <p>I tried asking about 1099 rates over w2 rates and he just turned the question back to me. I'd rather he went and got the best rate they're willing to pay, rather than squeezing the rate I'm willing to work for out of me.</p> <p>[update] </p> <p>I noticed when re-reading that they had assumed I wanted a 1099 through them (so they'd remain the middle-man). I asked for a 1099 through the client (I have a business license) and they stopped talking to me. ;) </p> <p>Lesson learned here: Wait until the client has interviewed you and wants to hire you before you ask for a direct 1099. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/438975/winning-contracts 8 Winning contracts Lonzo 2009-01-13T13:42:18Z 2009-09-09T16:13:55Z <p>What are some of the secrets to ensuring that one gets development contracts from potential clients? Especially if you are a solo coder.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7743/do-you-think-using-websites-like-elance-to-obtain-side-jobs-while-still-working 5 Do you think using websites like Elance, to obtain side jobs while still working full time, could help my programming career? Lord Future 2008-08-11T12:55:38Z 2009-09-08T20:36:41Z <p>Do you think using websites like <a href="http://www.elance.com" rel="nofollow">Elance</a>, to obtain side jobs while still working full time, could help my programming career?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/173025/would-you-take-a-pay-cut-to-get-a-higher-position 3 Would you take a pay-cut to get a higher position? jonathanconway 2008-10-06T02:10:46Z 2009-09-08T19:56:56Z <p>Say you're in a contracting developer role at a bank that pays well and will probably be extended.</p> <p>Then you get offered a permanent role at an IT solution provider as a Senior Developer/Technical Lead.</p> <p>Would you stick with the contracting, or go to the permanent role?</p> <p>The contract role: - pays well - will probably be extended - provides finance industry experience - is reasonably challenging, although I don't get much ownership over the projects</p> <p>The permanent role: - pays less - gives me technical lead/team lead experience- - involves a range of websites for different clients, and I get to take ownership of projects - much more challenging technically, as I have to "earn my stripes" within the team before I'll be given team lead responsibilities.</p> <p>If you were in this situation, would you take the pay-cut and go with the permanent role? Or would you continue contracting, and not feel like you might have missed out on something really good?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/200492/how-should-i-decide-rates-and-negotiate-as-a-contractor 2 How should I decide rates and negotiate as a contractor? pdeva 2008-10-14T09:23:06Z 2009-09-08T19:25:29Z <p>I am planning on starting out doing consulting in the bay area. I would like to know how do you guys decide on consulting rates for a project and how do you go about negotiating them with a client?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1375383/penalty-clause-on-programming-contract 4 Penalty clause on programming contract Everyone 2009-09-03T19:17:53Z 2009-09-03T19:53:50Z <p>I am considering the move to the other side of development, as a contract programmer. </p> <p>SO has given me a good few hints on the kind of figures to quote ( and why ), and a few points to bear in mind such as <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/624230/should-i-sign-a-non-competition-clause-in-freelance-contract">Non-competition</a> and [IP Protection] </p> <p>Having worked as a programmer for a while, I know that a few reasons for deadline delays may be - </p> <ol> <li>Estimates can be all over the place both from the Contractor, and the Job provider</li> <li>Things like bandwidth bottlenecks, merge for high-impact code etc</li> <li>Clarification time on provided requirements... etc</li> </ol> <p>If you have worked as a contract programmer then</p> <ul> <li><p>How frequently do you encounter a penalty/forfeit clause in your agreement?</p></li> <li><p>What do you deem unacceptable in the penalty/forfeit clause?</p></li> </ul>