Business Redesign

At the moment, I’m doing the initial work on re-designing the website for my own company – you know, the one that’s not linked to D4D in any feasible way.

The logo’s being redone, and I’m pretty sure of which one it’ll be (out of a selection of five or six from the designer) so that’s one part of the list checked off. Well, it would be if I actually had a list. Hmm, maybe I should make a list…

Anyway, the website redesign isn’t just going to be a cosmetic one, I’m also going to be putting in a lot of work on the back-end, which will also make it more maintainable in the long-run. Well, that’s the plan, anyway.

So along with everything else, I’m going to be moving the whole shebang onto WordPress 2.3. I’ve not used it before, so it’s making for an interesting learning curve – particularly with putting the static pages into WordPress as well. Overall, it makes sense though – and will increase my own knowledge of WP, which’ll help with a couple of other upcoming projects as well. No bad thing.

And with luck it’ll mean I don’t need to re-do it again drastically for a good year to eighteen months. Bonus.


Contract Extension / End Of Year

It’s now been confirmed that I’m now going to be in the same workplace ’til the end of this year. Not bad, considering that the initial contract was for three months, and that started a year ago yesterday.

In many ways it’s not too bad here – the journey is easily doable, the work is OK and getting better now that the main frameworks are in place, and I can start developing other add-on bits that make the various relevant departments go “Ooooooh” , or even on one occasion “Bloody hell, I didn’t know you could do that!”. (which is always satisfying) At the same time I’m adding in a lot of functionality and groundwork for the future, figuring stuff out, and doing a lot of funky bits. (Which reminds me, I really must update my CV with some of this rubbish before I forget) And the people are… OK, that’s the sticking point.

I get on OK with most of the people in this area of the office, and in other related bits of the company. That’s fine. I just don’t get on with a couple of people, I simply clash with their personalities. I manage it as professionally as possible, but it’s still noticeable. These people also don’t get on with a lot of others, and it’s noticeable when they’re not in the office, because stuff just gets done without all the drama. I know the manager of the team notices this too, and has commented on it several times.

So I’ll stay, particularly while the work is again interesting, and we’ll just have to see how the minority bits go. Because that’s all they are, a minor input on the day. And really I can handle that for the most part. And if I can’t, well, I’ll just go and sit outside, take a breather.

Yes, life could be worse.


One Year On

Blimey, I’ve been working in Cambridge for a year today.

How time flies when you’re having fun. *cough*


Commuting Travel

According to this story, a study by the RAC Foundatioin suggests that about 70% of British workers travel to work by car.

To be honest, I really can’t say that I’m surprised. Up until recently, I’ve always commuted to work by public transport- whether that’s bus, train, or both. It’s been very rare that I can walk to work, and also pretty rare (until moving to Norfolk) for me to drive to work, although that’s primarily due to the fact I’ve only owned a car in the last six months.

While I was in Manchester, it was always far easier to use a bus than to drive in to work. Cheaper, too- by a massive margin. The amount I paid for a weekly ticket into the city centre was about the same as I’d have paid for one day’s parking. Even when I started working in Oldham, and doubled by weekly bus-ticket costs (due to needing tickets from two bus companies) it was still significantly cheaper. Mind you, the service by First Bus from Oldham was fucking abysmal, which didn’t help – but it was still easier than doing the run by car.

In Bracknell (the only place recently where I could walk to work for some time) I didn’t drive to work- the train to Wokingham (once I’d moved from the walk-to-work place) took 10 minutes, and would race past the daily traffic jams on the A329(M) every day. Again, it cost me about £10 per week to do – and parking for the day in Wokingham would’ve run to about £6 or so, which made it cost effective.

When I started here in Cambridge, I was still living in Bracknell, and used the train to get here and back every week. If I’d been driving it would’ve taken me about as long as the train journey, but if I’d had the choice, I’d have used a car – just lugging a week’s worth of clothes on the train every week was a pain in the arse, and would’ve been far easier in a car.

Since we moved to Norfolk, I do still tend to use the train most of the time. As I’ve written before, it takes a bit more time door-to-door, but does have the advantage of giving me extra time to do work, and the like. Works for me.

This week, though, the train line is being fixed/maintained/repaired/whatever along a large section of the train route, which is being replaced by buses. So I’m driving in this week, because it’s easier.

But if Attleborough wasn’t on the main train line to Cambridge, or if I worked outside the city centre, I’d be driving it every day. There would be no point in using public transport, because it would make the commute unfeasibly long. When I change contracts, if it’s a place off the beaten track, I’ll be driving in.

Reports like this that then say people should use more public transport are all well and good, but before anyone is able to get the majority of people onto public transport, the infrastructure for it has to be there – the services have to be reliable, on-time, and regular. More importantly, they have to go where people want them to go – there’s no point creating a huge business park that doesn’t have a good bus service, for example (and believe me, I’ve worked in a few of those).

Until the infrastructure is sorted out, people won’t use it. And until people start using it, the companies will say there isn’t the demand for the infrastructure to be expanded. Good, innit?


Changes in Travel

So as of yesterday, I’m back to using the train rather than driving in to Cambridge every day. In fairness, I only planned to drive in while putting in the extra time and work to get the site launched on time. And now that that’s been done, and the initial bug-hunt is over and done with, some level of sanity can return to my day.

Returning to the train has both good and bad aspects to it. I can’t deny, I’d kind of got used to having some space and time to myself on the journey, so it’s probably a downside to be back in the general throng of people. Time-wise, while the journey is the same time (i.e. roughly an hour) going by train takes about 20-30 minutes longer when one takes into account the waiting for the train to depart, and the walk to/from the office while I’m in Cambridge, rather than the convenience of door-to-door travel.

On the plus side, I get two hours a day back for doing my own stuff. Obviously while driving I can’t use the laptop, which has meant that my writing time has been severely cut back – both for D4D, the business, and letters/emails to friends. That is definitely A Good Thing. It also means I get to relax a bit between home and work (well, except when I’m getting my feet stepped on by fucking idiot people – yes, you, sat opposite me – fuckwit cunt) rather than having to concentrate on driving on roads populated by tosspot motherfuckers BMW drivers.

Oh, and overall it costs me a sod-load less too – £250 per month for the train ticket, rather than a full tank of diesel per week (which is just on the weekly journey, without taking into account any other driving I do) at about £55-60 plus parking when I can’t get a space at work (about 60% of the time) plus depreciation etc. on the car – after all, in the last six weeks I’ve put roughly 4,000 miles on the poxy thing.

So yes, for the forseeable, I’m back on the commuting train. Overall, things could be a lot worse.


Business Motivation

It’s coming up to that time again where I want to start doing some extra work. Over the last couple of months it’s just not really been feasible, with the additional pressures of relaunching the main work site as well as two smaller sites, so extra work would’ve been just insane.

Thankfully that’s now all over and done with, so I’m back to looking for more new things to be doing. I’ve had some interesting feelers from a couple of sources, and over the next two weeks I also plan to be doing some self promotion as well, sending out letters, going to do some visits, that kind of thing.

It should be interesting – but I know I need to keep myself motivated on this one. This year hasn’t been all that great motivation-wise – although that’s a whole seperate post- and one thing that has hit me hard was the evidence of my own piss-poor judgement of other people as I’ve one client who still hasn’t paid me, three months down the line. I’ve tried reminders, and generally stayed in touch, but there’s been nothing forthcoming out of him. Thankfully (well, semi-thankfully) the invoice for that one went through Parasol, so in theory it’s Parasol that should be chasing him for payment, rather than me. That doesn’t seem to actually be the case – although I wouldn’t know for sure, as Parasol are utterly shit at communication too – so it may end up going through Small Claims Court before long.

Anyway, yes, the main challenge is going to be about keeping myself motivated to get new work. Right now I just want to catch up on some sleep, but I know I need to set some time aside, sort out potential sites, and probably also redesign my company site as well as updating my profile with the various sites I’m registered on.

Should be interesting, if nothing else. And a provider of some D4D™ content along the way too, I should think. You lucky people…


Organising Time Off

One thing I’m personally really bad at- and that’s partly down to being a contractor, and the sheer cost of it- is organising time away from work. I’d never deny this, although I do work on it when I can.

This week, we’ve booked a holiday for next March – going back to the Lake District, to the same place we did in March 2006. Already, I’m really looking forward to it.