| ▲ | OptionOfT 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||
I've seen that in a large management consultancy company. Part of their risk management procedures (both for the company and in terms of some EU law) meant they couldn't keep contractors for longer than x years. They'd have to convert to employee or separate for 12 months. Bit that doesn't really work in knowledge systems. Even with the best documentation people will build up knowledge that no one has, and their departure is costly. Equally at the end of their contract a lot of time will need to be spend on a handover which slows down others even more. So what happened? The contractor went via another middle man, which checked the correct boxes on the form, and everybody was happy. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | selcuka an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
> Even with the best documentation people will build up knowledge that no one has I think that's the part management teams are missing. They assume that employees are just human resources and they can replace a senior engineer with a 100% equivalent one when needed. | ||||||||||||||
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