I was on 75 GBP per hour with or about $110 per hour. That was in 2000. Next
contract after that was around $75 per hour and that lasted 2 years.
Involved a lot of travelling. (4+ hours per day)
These days I work from home and am happy to take lower rates. Seems to suit
the various clients as well.
Adam
-----Original Message-----
From: Tim Heald [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 08 December 2003 03:21
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: economic admission
I would really like to know a CF developer that made 156,00 a year.
Seriously.
-----Original Message-----
From: Eric Dawson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 6:47 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Re: economic admission
I think we would all prefer to be working for $75/hr. But the problem
with
the $75/hour work, is you have to get it.
Has anybody ever compiled a salary survey fulltime and contract for this
list?
Eric
----- Original Message -----
From: Charlie Griefer
To: CF-Community
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 4:14 PM
Subject: Re: economic admission
$75hr vs $14 ... vs $0
I think 'better' in this case doesn't mean 'back to full health', but
rather better in comparison to where it's been. I know too many (good)
programmers who are (still) out of work.
On this list alone I think we've been seeing more and more job
postings
coming in...more people getting interviews, and more people getting jobs.
Doesn't mean the economy (the IT sector, specifically) is "healed".
But
it *is* better than it was before, I think.
----- Original Message -----
From: Paul Ihrig
To: CF-Community
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 3:09 PM
Subject: RE: economic admission
you sure?
i went on a second interview last night at 8pm to a ware house
alone...
i will except any thing they say on Monday, but i don't consider it
a
better
economy.
75/hour vs. 14....
-----Original Message-----
From: Matthew Small [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 3:42 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: economic admission
I have to admit it, the economy really is better. It's only been
two days
on the job hunt and I've already got an interview scheduled at one
company
and my resume forwarded to upper level managemnt at another company.
The last time I was on the job hunt (summer 2001) I spent three
months out
of work and the one job (except the current job) that got to the
negotiation
point offered me peanuts to move to a podunk town in the middle of
Texas.
- Matt Small
[Todays Threads] [This Message] [Subscription] [Fast Unsubscribe] [User Settings]
