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Sallaried Contracts, How Much Can They Expect?
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I am talking to a potential employer and they seem to want to put me on a salaried contract. Now I don't mind being flexible but are there any limits to what hours they can expect me to work?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.it depends. My late DH didn't have an upper hours limit but there was a toil arrangement. He was a very senior manager with specialist skills and when he was needed out of hours it was because it was an emergency and only he could do what was needed....He was required to sign an agreement agreeing to not be bound by the working time directive, and his salary package was well good. My boss at work in the NHS had a similar contract although the remuneration wasn't as generous. I am not sure if you can dodge the working time directive now and of course some jobs have separate requirements around limiting working time for safety reasons.
an adult can opt out of the working time directive https:/ /www.hr -inform .co.uk/ employm ent_law /workin g-time
Well yes i also have a form about waiving that. Now those combined mean unlimited. But the other terms talk about times of no work and reduction of hours like a waged worker so i think it may just be a case of these are templates that have to be edited.
I can see the requirement for waiving the 48 hour a week limit if say i was to go on a business trip (the role is an R&D engineer), a couple of years ago i did just that with my current employer (got paid £50 to have a tow hour dinner with the customer while my collegue groaned about "only" being salaried
I can see the requirement for waiving the 48 hour a week limit if say i was to go on a business trip (the role is an R&D engineer), a couple of years ago i did just that with my current employer (got paid £50 to have a tow hour dinner with the customer while my collegue groaned about "only" being salaried
Every job I have had has required me to put in additional hours at some stage. Ask any teacher on here, for example. Many management jobs also require flexibility. You could explain to them your expectations- eg happy to do a maximum of 50 hours a week occasionally but not more than say 160 hours in any 4 week period, or something like that. They might say that is okay or may say forget it, but at least you'll know. You can always set out the salary you would need, and you can walk away if they won't give you enough.
If you want to give it a go though then try it for a couple of months.
If you want to give it a go though then try it for a couple of months.
Well i am currently in work so a couple of months trial is going to be hard, as it is I have to do an 11 week notice period with my current employer. The best i can offer them is half days. As we are at the start of the year once i announce i am leaving I can't really go and take a years worth of holiday that has not yet been accrued.
I was not suggesting that. Either stay where you are or leave and take a gamble. People do it all the time with jobs- there are rarely any guarantees a new job will work out. Negotiate the best deal you can and then try it. The best that can happen is you do well, The worst is that you decide after a few months it's not for you, so you start looking again.
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