On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 8:28 PM, Ajai Khattri <a...@bitblit.net> wrote: > If you're not in a well-funded startup and not fired yet then you should > be careful. Now is a good time to be in a full-time gig with an > established firm.
I find that diversification is a good thing. If you're a consultant with a half-dozen clients and one of them tanks, you've still got others to rely on until you track down some more work. It's a lot easier to survive that than it is to suddenly find yourself jobless. Of course, if the market is suddenly flooded with new "freelancers" who are willing to work for chicken scratch then suddenly you might find yourself high and dry, but I still think that's easier to deal with than being laid off. The good news, as Hans pointed out, is that there still seem to be a lot of PHP-related jobs out there for qualified candidates. So far I haven't seen anything to convince me that a good programmer would be without work for very long. -Brian realm3 web applications [realm3.com] Information architecture, application development. phone: (917) 512-3594 fax: (440) 744-3559 _______________________________________________ New York PHP User Group Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php