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Will contract work hurt your chances of landing a permanent job?

  • Writer: Richard Fruscione
    Richard Fruscione
  • Dec 4, 2018
  • 3 min read

Do recruiters think you're an unstable employee because you have a few short term jobs on your resume?

Were you told that you were not loyal to an employer simply because you had to take a temporary assignment, contract or consulting work to pay the bills while looking for the long-term, direct hire job?

Is it assumed you won’t stick around in their job because you moved around recently—for reasons beyond your control?

Well, I think most recruiters that make these assumptions about job seekers with short term work are totally wrong in their assumptions, mostly because their assumptions are based on how you portray yourself on your resume.

And they are missing out on awesome talent.

It has been my expereince with individuals that take long-term contract assignments to be some of the most loyal and humbly talented people in our workforce.

Here are two explanations why.

1. Why contractors are the most loyal employees:

When someone takes a 6 month long assignment, to keep to their word of staying the length of the assignment, they are essentially halting all interviews for direct hire work. They have to—or they may land a job and have to leave the assignment.

Now, many people would think, “Well, of course, why wouldn’t you leave a temp job? Why would you stop interviewing for a direct hire job since you know the temp job will end?”

This is a logical thought for people who think for themselves and don’t care about the word they gave or the assignment they are working on, but contracted employees have a stronger sense of integrity. Contractors/temporary employees give their word at the sacrifice of their career path.

I have see it happen time and time again.

Contractors get stuck in what I labeled the “Temp Job Rut.”

The “Temp Job Rut” is when someone takes a temp assignment, ceases all interviews while on the length of the assignment, and then the assignment ends. And because ongoing interviewing hasn’t been happening, there isn’t a direct hire job to walk into - but the bills are coming in, so the person simply takes the next temporary assignment to stay employed.

It’s an easy rut to fall into—but hiring managers and recruiters that are not experienced with temporary hiring don’t know this. And they lose out on loyal, versatile employees.

2. Why contractors are humbly talented:

Contract employees have to start an assignment often with little to no training. They are not getting 2-3 days of orientation to ease into the company culture, like direct hire employees do. No welcome committee or new hire cake in the break room celebrating the new person joining the company.

Nope, temporary employees often get told where their desk is (not even escorted to the desk), given a number to call tech people to get login credentials, and have to start working with somewhat ill-defined job specs with the expectation they will produce results in a short period of time.

And they often have to do it themselves.

Without help from others.

They can’t regularly lean on fellow co-workers, since regular employees don’t want to help the “temp” or feel their job may be threatened by the consultant—so they don’t help the consultant.

So they are on their own, and despite all of these obstacles, they get the job done.

And here is the humble part: They don’t brag about getting the assignment done with no training, little instruction and poor co-worker support. They view it as just doing their job.

This is why temporary, consulting and contract employees are often where the hidden talent lies.

And I know how to help you market the short term positions to be viewed as an asset.

Stop struggling and promote yourself confidently. Have a job search plan that is reflective of what you have achieved, regardless if it was done as a contractor/temporary employee or direct hire.

Please visit, like, follow and share my page:

https://www.facebook.com/NYMinuteResume/

 
 
 

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