Charging too little?

The Top Ten signs you may be charging too little – fairly tongue in cheek, but amusing all the same.


Time Out

Following on from the chaos and insane workflow of the last month, now that things have calmed down a bit I’ve taken this last week or so as almost time ‘off’. While I’m still working on my normal stuff, I’ve not been doing anything techie outside of that, and it’s been really nice. Hell, half the time I haven’t even had the latop on while traelling on the train – and when I do, it’s for writing D4D posts, or letters. The rest of the time, I’ve been either reading, or just watching the world go past.

It’s been quite pleasant, actually. I can’t deny, I’m quite a workaholic in general, but after the recent times, it’s been necessary for a bit of downtime, and a bit of ‘not working’ – I know there’s still a whole bundle of stuff on the horizon, but it’s not here yet, so I’m taking the time while I can.


Taxing Issues

Oh god, yes, I’m back to doing self-assessment tax-returns again.

A while back I got a ‘short form’ self-assessment. This shouldn’t be rocket-science, as I’m completely PAYE (Pay As You Earn) at the moment, so it’ll just be a matter of filling in the final figures from my P60 for Tax Year 2006/07, and job done.

Only, um, I haven’t received a P60. That’s odd. I’d best check it up.

So an email goes off to Parasol, the umbrella company that’s currently my ’employer’, asking what’s happened to the P60.

“We’ve sent it out, back in April” comes the reply.
“I haven’t received it. What address did you put on it?”
“[xyz], Bracknell.” they say.
“I haven’t lived there since December, and have updated my address details with you on both moves since then. So why did it go to an address that’s six months out of date?”
“…” Nothing. No response.

They have managed to send me a PDF copy of the P60, so I can do all the tax-return stuff, but all the same, I’d still like to know why they sent the P60 to the wrong address…


Calming Down

Calming Down

After the chaos of the last couple of weeks, things are finally calming down a bit. Some of that is through our own actions, and some of it is through the actions of others.

Firstly, we’ve completed two full rooms of the house, to a point where all we now need to do is buy some extra furniture for the living room, and unpack books and stuff onto bookcases in the office. It’s a good feeling – and the reactions of other people who’ve come round has shown us that the plans we’ve got for the place are just about right. The rooms we’ve worked on (and when I say ‘we’, I mean primarily Herself) look really good, smart, open, and comfortable. If you saw ‘before’ and ‘after’ photos (and you still might) you wouldn’t believe they were the same house. We’ve now just got to complete one more room (our current bedroom, which will- eventually- be the guest bedroom) for the moment, and that now really only needs some painting to be done.

Secondly, the garden stuff is well on the way. There’s not been a lot we could do over the last couple of weeks, with the levels of rainfall, but equally everything is still becoming more manageable. There’s still an amount of work to be done, and most of that will be done in July, but it’s getting there.

And Thirdly, my workload has dropped. Client #2 have received what they wanted, they’re happy, and the job’s done. When I got the contract, it was supposed to be a rolling thing with continuous work coming in, although I was rather cynical about that, and wondered whether that was some kind of ‘sweetener’ to get someone good to do the site, rather than just a two-month contract. Bizarre, but hey. Turns out I was right – the site’s been completed- within timescales and budgets- and all of a sudden there’s no more work coming in, but thanks for the site.

To be honest, I’m not surprised – and nor am I really all that bothered. I’ve been paid for the work I’ve done, the client is happy, and that’s fine. It’s also had the side-effect of giving me some other ideas of my own that can be developed and tried out. Even better, it means I’ve got some time to myself again.

In hindsight, taking on Client #2 wasn’t my smartest move. It pushed up my workload to silly levels (although not quite to the levels of downright stupid – been there, done that, no plans to do it again) – and while normally it wouldn’t have been a problem, when I then also took into account house stuff as well, it wasn’t my finest hour.

Still, all’s done now, and July is looking like it might actually be slightly more sensible. Well, except for social life – we’re away this weekend, I’m seeing Peter Gabriel in two weeks’ time, and then we’ve guests the weekend after. Lessened workloads never looked better.


Setting Up

Ah, I do love it when I have to sort out the PC of a new starter in a company.

Particularly when the IT department in the company are a bunch of smeghead chuffbags, and can’t get anything right.

So far, Windows Update has had to install 57 fixes that IT couldn’t be keffed to do.

As well as that, various useful things (in the context of the work we do, and how this company’s web stuff is set up) like :

  • IIS (Internet Information Services, for those who don’t know- a web server that in this instance runs on the local machine)
  • Subversion
  • Tortoise SVN client for Subversion
  • Firefox
  • MS Office
  • MS Outlook, along with setting up email account etc.

So, nothing important then. *cough*


Conundrum

Hmm, what do you do when you see that your new colleague (who is also your new manager while you’re with the business) is a reader of D4D™ ?

This could be about to make life interesting…


Reminder

Note to self : A very useful reminder about why bad clients can still be good in the long run.

Very a propos right now, I have to say.