Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
It'll get old fast and the travelling is a hassle, but the experience is great and money is good as well. I'd go for it.
Yeah, generally expect to be away from home Monday through Friday. When you're home, you'll want to stay home, eat at home, etc. - eating out everyday isn't the greatest thing ever as you can imagine.Originally posted by: Queasy
I interviewed for a consulting position with Unisys once. When we got to the travel part and I said 50% or less, the interviewer stopped the interview and started explaining the travel requirements and how he doesn't think the job fits me. I said, "Yeah, I'd like to keep my girlfriend. I don't think we'd have a relationship with me being gone 100% of the time." The interviewer responded, "Yeah, this is why my wife left me."
:shocked:
I'm not, but know many people who are. When I say it gets "old fast", I simply mean the travelling part. A lot of people see being able to stay in a fancy hotel, getting meals paid for, flights, etc. almost as a novelty, but if you're doing that weekly, it won't be exciting anymore.Originally posted by: Gobadgrs
Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
It'll get old fast and the travelling is a hassle, but the experience is great and money is good as well. I'd go for it.
You still in it? How long have you been one?
In that case, I'd go for it. You're right, you will get to see the country, and for a good bit of time too - unlike taking vacations where you visit a place for just a few days or week, you'll be there for a while, and will get to experience life in many different places.Originally posted by: Gobadgrs
I'm 26 and single... I think it might be good for a couple of years to make some good cash and see the country.
Originally posted by: Gobadgrs
I'm 26 and single... I think it might be good for a couple of years to make some good cash and see the country.
Originally posted by: pradeep1
I worked for Accenture (Andersen Consulting back then) for four years before I left right after 9/11. I was fresh out of college and the life, pay, travel, and challenges were great, but each person's experience will vary. If you hook up with a good group/technology that is in high demand, you'll be like kings. If you are stuck doing run-service agreements, you'll travel less, but your life will be mundane, to say the least.
I'd say consulting is great if you are single and don't have any strong ties to a particular place. If your friends are equally busy, you'll do okay. The travel is draining...I usually left home at 4:00 AM on Monday to catch the 6:00 AM out to god-knows-where, and would be back either late Thursday night, or sometimes would work until Saturday morning. When you are a consultant, you are being billed out at least 8 X your salary (I was, at least), and therefore clients expect superhuman things out of you. It also doesn't help that your partner that you are working for also tend to overpromise, and you end up delivering.
Originally posted by: Descartes
Originally posted by: pradeep1
I worked for Accenture (Andersen Consulting back then) for four years before I left right after 9/11. I was fresh out of college and the life, pay, travel, and challenges were great, but each person's experience will vary. If you hook up with a good group/technology that is in high demand, you'll be like kings. If you are stuck doing run-service agreements, you'll travel less, but your life will be mundane, to say the least.
I'd say consulting is great if you are single and don't have any strong ties to a particular place. If your friends are equally busy, you'll do okay. The travel is draining...I usually left home at 4:00 AM on Monday to catch the 6:00 AM out to god-knows-where, and would be back either late Thursday night, or sometimes would work until Saturday morning. When you are a consultant, you are being billed out at least 8 X your salary (I was, at least), and therefore clients expect superhuman things out of you. It also doesn't help that your partner that you are working for also tend to overpromise, and you end up delivering.
That's absolute robbery, for you and the client.