Re: About 12% on post to tech-write list

Subject: Re: About 12% on post to tech-write list
From: Berk/Devlin <armadill -at- earthlink -dot- net>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com>
Date: Wed, 09 May 2001 00:30:24 -0700

Hey Guys:

This particular "isolated example" has probably been making $200,000 per year (on just his "agency") plus earning a decent living doing something else with the rest of his time. Assuming he didn't only invest in NASDAQ stocks, he can probably live pretty well on the past -- say 5 years' -- earnings.

And, I'd bet he DID "earn" this money on tech writers' and programmers' hourly wages.

MANY of the famous names in high tech REQUIRE ALL their contractors to go through an approved provider. And, the approved provider is USUALLY NOT the person who found the contractor the job. The approved provider is literally just some guy who got his company name on the list at a particular employer.

Basically, my experience in Silicon Valley is that this leech-like type of "agency" is the norm, not the exception, for high-tech contracting positions.

And, I don't console myself with the fact that the leeches are going to be making less because the job market is tanking. They can afford a pay cut better than the rest of us too.

The current economy gives the companies that insist on these kinds of third-party relationships with contractors significantly MORE clout over job-seekers than they had when job seekers were less numerous. IMO, in a tight job market, it's MORE likely that the approved providers will keep a significant proportion of control over jobs at some of the larger, most secure employers in this area.

--Emily


On Tue, 08 May 2001 21:26:37 -0700, Elna Tymes <etymes -at- lts -dot- com> wrote:

Oh, I just love it when the WSJ gets wind of an isolated incident, skews the
timeline a bit, and presents the story as current news! ...

"Agency" folks like the one described are dropping like flies in Silicon Valley,
unless they have locked in clients for multi-year contracts with people who just
get rolled over from PO to PO as time passes. ... But he'd be the exception, rather than the rule. And he wouldn't be placing tech writers. Or programmers for that matter.
... As little as a year ago, agencies were making fine money if they could find good
talent, perhaps as much as the Los Altos hotshot described above. But no longer.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On the web at www.armadillosoft.com *** Armadillo Associates, Inc.
~ Project management, developer relations and
extremely-technical technical documentation that developers find useful.~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*** Deva(tm) Tools for Dreamweaver and Deva(tm) Search ***
Build Contents, Indexes, and Search for Web Sites and Help Systems
Available now at http://www.devahelp.com or info -at- devahelp -dot- com

Sponsored by Information Mapping, Inc., a professional services firm
specializing in Knowledge Management and e-content solutions. See
http://www.infomap.com or 800-463-6627 for more about our solutions.

---
You are currently subscribed to techwr-l as: archive -at- raycomm -dot- com
To unsubscribe send a blank email to leave-techwr-l-obscured -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com
Send administrative questions to ejray -at- raycomm -dot- com -dot- Visit http://www.raycomm.com/techwhirl/ for more resources and info.


Previous by Author: RE: About 12% on post to tech-write list
Next by Author: Re: "Persist" as a transitive verb? <gack!>
Previous by Thread: Re: About 12% on post to tech-write list
Next by Thread: RE: API/javadoc - classes/methods that should not be public


What this post helpful? Share it with friends and colleagues:


Sponsored Ads