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Consultants - when did you decide the time was right
Message
From
29/10/2008 23:08:04
Mike Cole
Yellow Lab Technologies
Stanley, Iowa, United States
 
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01358178
Message ID:
01358247
Views:
20
>>>>I'm interested to hear stories from consultants about when they realized the time was right to go out on their own.
>>>
>>>In my case I worked for a guy who was a consultant for 3 years and was his ONLY employee. During that time I learned how he went about handling the business side of running a company. I already had 10+ years of programming experience when I met him and had worked for small and large organziations in the past. After working for him for several years I took another position somewhere else for a few months, then stumbled across a 'tele-commute' gig - so I started that and never looked back. The 3 years I spent sharing a tiny office with the consultant has proved to be quite handy.
>>
>>That is my major roadblock - I have no idea where to start to learn the business end of things.
>
>Well, at lot of it is just common sense and knowing how to properly communicate with someone. Any books you can dig up on running a small biz is good - and check out your local Chamber of Commerce.
>
>>I'm starting to get really sick of working at places that are more about politics than good work. I feel that where I'm at now, my good suggestions and ideas are ignored and the only reason I can think of this happening is because possibly people are threatened. They don't care that I can go home and exploit a security vulnerability that I have been complaining about for 2 years to post stuff to their GL. They don't care that the website runs like crap and nobody wants to use it. They just don't want to accept anything as less than a huge success, and put on the blinders about the stuff that needs to be fixed.
>>
>>I'm getting really tired of taking orders from business people who have no business telling me specifically how to do my job.
>
>hahaha. - one thing to keep in mind. When you're in biz for yourself, suddenly EVERYONE of your clients your boss.

I have no problem working with clients and end users, and I really do enjoy my relationship with them. I pride myself on not only being an IT resource, but also a friendly person. The problem I do have is when my boss basically wants me to make every single code change on paper before I make it in code. Most of my work involves learning on the job and I am unable to just sit down and tell them exactly how I am going to do the code change before actually do it and experimenting with it.
Very fitting: http://xkcd.com/386/
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