What "I Need A New Job" Really Means..
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School teaches you everything except how to get a job. And, with the average length of a job being just 18 months, every job is temporary. Which means, job search is now a skill every professional needs to survive
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/what-i-need-new-job-really-means-j-t-o-donnell
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Interesting
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@thecreativeone91 said:
School teaches you everything except how to get a job. And, with the average length of a job being just 18 months, every job is temporary. Which means, job search is now a skill every professional needs to survive
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/what-i-need-new-job-really-means-j-t-o-donnell
18 months... The last I heard the stat was 24-30 months, that has gone down a lot.
Job seeking is a skill I am trying to cultivate, still not that great at it. -
lol, 18 months.
I think my average is 3 years. I've only been at my current place for two. Looks long term -
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
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Not really surprised about the whole 18 months thing. I'm still old-fashioned in that I'd love to find a job that I loved and just work it until I retire. Sadly, this is antiquated thinking...
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@scottalanmiller said:
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
Where you really employeed or just a contractor?
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
Where you really employeed or just a contractor?
He's been mostly a contractor. I know that.
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What do you count as "job"? Plenty of people stay at the same organisation their whole lives, but get promoted to new jobs, or get new responsibilities and new job titles.
I've been in my current job for 13 years, but before that I probably moved jobs ever 18 months. When you're young, it's often the best (and sometimes the only) way to get decent pay rises.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
What do you count as "job"? Plenty of people stay at the same organisation their whole lives, but get promoted to new jobs, or get new responsibilities and new job titles.
I've been in my current job for 13 years, but before that I probably moved jobs ever 18 months. When you're young, it's often the best (and sometimes the only) way to get decent pay rises.
Yeah, but it seems like most people are changing jobs quite a bit...
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
Where you really employeed or just a contractor?
What's the difference? A contractor is still as employee.
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@handsofqwerty said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
Where you really employeed or just a contractor?
He's been mostly a contractor. I know that.
But always an employee. It's not either / or.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
What do you count as "job"? Plenty of people stay at the same organisation their whole lives, but get promoted to new jobs, or get new responsibilities and new job titles.
I've been in my current job for 13 years, but before that I probably moved jobs ever 18 months. When you're young, it's often the best (and sometimes the only) way to get decent pay rises.
That's a good question. Is it different companies or just different roles?
Although the number of people staying with a single company for long is dwindling. Not sure I know many people topping two years someplace anymore.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@handsofqwerty said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
Where you really employeed or just a contractor?
He's been mostly a contractor. I know that.
But always an employee. It's not either / or.
It's about how you get paid. When I worked at a specific company, I was a contractor for that company, but considered an employee of the recruiter. So if it's that kind of situation, I see how you say both. But it can also be exclusively one or the other.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
What do you count as "job"? Plenty of people stay at the same organisation their whole lives, but get promoted to new jobs, or get new responsibilities and new job titles.
I've been in my current job for 13 years, but before that I probably moved jobs ever 18 months. When you're young, it's often the best (and sometimes the only) way to get decent pay rises.
That's a good question. Is it different companies or just different roles?
Although the number of people staying with a single company for long is dwindling. Not sure I know many people topping two years someplace anymore.
Yeah, but I'd prefer if I could stay somewhere for just awhile.
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@handsofqwerty said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@handsofqwerty said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
Where you really employeed or just a contractor?
He's been mostly a contractor. I know that.
But always an employee. It's not either / or.
It's about how you get paid. When I worked at a specific company, I was a contractor for that company, but considered an employee of the recruiter. So if it's that kind of situation, I see how you say both. But it can also be exclusively one or the other.
No it is not.
And you are unaware who your employer was. Check with the IRS. Employment is not as vague as people think. The company directing your work is your employer. The one signing the check is the payroll firm. Who signs your check is effectively irrelevant to employment.
Contractor and employee are normally the same thing. It's an internal designation, not an employment one.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@handsofqwerty said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@handsofqwerty said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
Where you really employeed or just a contractor?
He's been mostly a contractor. I know that.
But always an employee. It's not either / or.
It's about how you get paid. When I worked at a specific company, I was a contractor for that company, but considered an employee of the recruiter. So if it's that kind of situation, I see how you say both. But it can also be exclusively one or the other.
No it is not.
And you are unaware who your employer was. Check with the IRS. Employment is not as vague as people think. The company directing your work is your employer. The one signing the check is the payroll firm. Who signs your check is effectively irrelevant to employment.
Contractor and employee are normally the same thing. It's an internal designation, not an employment one.
When I received my W2 this year, I was not shown as an employee of the company I was actually doing work for, but rather the recruiter. I was an employee of the contractor but a contractor to my real employer, if that makes sense...
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@handsofqwerty said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@handsofqwerty said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@handsofqwerty said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I was way below eighteen months for most of my career.
Where you really employeed or just a contractor?
He's been mostly a contractor. I know that.
But always an employee. It's not either / or.
It's about how you get paid. When I worked at a specific company, I was a contractor for that company, but considered an employee of the recruiter. So if it's that kind of situation, I see how you say both. But it can also be exclusively one or the other.
No it is not.
And you are unaware who your employer was. Check with the IRS. Employment is not as vague as people think. The company directing your work is your employer. The one signing the check is the payroll firm. Who signs your check is effectively irrelevant to employment.
Contractor and employee are normally the same thing. It's an internal designation, not an employment one.
When I received my W2 this year, I was not shown as an employee of the company I was actually doing work for, but rather the recruiter. I was an employee of the contractor but a contractor to my real employer, if that makes sense...
And? The employer field on a W2 is a payroll field and not vetoed as the employer. It's not related. Your employer is the one carrying legal employer responsibilities. You can't sue a payroll firm for not paying you, only the employer.
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The terms contractor and employee are used very loosely in the US. Contractor is not a status in the US. It's a term that people use to describe how their employers see them and how they are reported to Wall St investors. Being or not being a contractor has no effect on employment status.
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I've had a mix. I've had most of my full time permanent employee jobs last 2-3 years. My Video production/Live Sound stuff for about 10 yrs. Then lots of other stuff, temp contract jobs for 1-3 months here and there. Did two Fast Food jobs for 2months each. Did some commission sales for 2yrs.
Sadly, the contract/temp stuff I have to take off my resume most of the time, it scares employers away. And then even the only 2-3yrs at most of my IT jobs has scared some away, heck even one of them that @scottalanmiller knows turned me down for a job because of the only 2-3yr stay. They said they wanted someone who had worked the same place for more like 7yrs, even if they didn't have that long actually in IT. They did say, they would consider hiring me as a janitor or something and after I get 4 yrs in with them plus get a masters degree they'd consider letting me do more with IT, before that I would only be allowed to plug in mice & keyboards, etc. no actual IT work. They currently don't have any IT staff besides the manager (who has no previous experience) and they contract out IT.
It seems like while the norm is 1-2 years even a bit longer than that hurts you in getting more jobs, and the temp contract stuff really hurts you. Which is bad, considering at least I've found most places, the only way to progress your career is to leave for a new job.