Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working for yourself. Writer. Professor. Consultant. You may need to work some hours between 9-5 but you have a lot of flexibility.
I'd argue that a consultant isn't all that flexible. You're beholden to the whims of your clients, including being available when they expect you to be - in person or otherwise. Plus, junior consultants don't get to chart their own course and need to earn their stripes through lots of hours usually spent colocated with either the client or colleagues.
OP is asking the wrong question. It should probably read "My son is okay working hard, but he wants to do it on his own schedule. What kind of jobs don't require set schedules?"
The answer to which totally depends on his level of experience and skill set. But in general, not many and vanishingly few for junior folks.
Not necessarily on his own schedule, just not a full 9-5 every single day of the week.
Well he will get Sat and Sunday off.
Teachers work 9-330pm, maybe he can be a gym teacher who phones it in?
He basically wants a part time career with benefits? Don’t we all?
No, he would be fine with a nursing type schedule, so on, then off, or working "all the time" but with flexibility. Just not a desk job that you do all week every week.
Anonymous wrote:Recruiting
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a 911 call taker/Police Dispatcher. I work 12s, I just worked this weekend but next week I only work 12 hours Weds and 8 on Thurs. that’s it. 3 day weekend every other weekend. Any time I work OT or a holiday I bank hours instead of pay. This allows for extra time off in addition to what is accrued.
Do you get benefits? Can I ask about pay? It must be very stressful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working for yourself. Writer. Professor. Consultant. You may need to work some hours between 9-5 but you have a lot of flexibility.
I was going to say: academia.
Some adjacent roles (like not admin but scientific staff at a university) are flexible too.
But academic job market is pretty grim..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working for yourself. Writer. Professor. Consultant. You may need to work some hours between 9-5 but you have a lot of flexibility.
I'd argue that a consultant isn't all that flexible. You're beholden to the whims of your clients, including being available when they expect you to be - in person or otherwise. Plus, junior consultants don't get to chart their own course and need to earn their stripes through lots of hours usually spent colocated with either the client or colleagues.
OP is asking the wrong question. It should probably read "My son is okay working hard, but he wants to do it on his own schedule. What kind of jobs don't require set schedules?"
The answer to which totally depends on his level of experience and skill set. But in general, not many and vanishingly few for junior folks.
Not necessarily on his own schedule, just not a full 9-5 every single day of the week.
Well he will get Sat and Sunday off.
Teachers work 9-330pm, maybe he can be a gym teacher who phones it in?
He basically wants a part time career with benefits? Don’t we all?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working for yourself. Writer. Professor. Consultant. You may need to work some hours between 9-5 but you have a lot of flexibility.
I'd argue that a consultant isn't all that flexible. You're beholden to the whims of your clients, including being available when they expect you to be - in person or otherwise. Plus, junior consultants don't get to chart their own course and need to earn their stripes through lots of hours usually spent colocated with either the client or colleagues.
OP is asking the wrong question. It should probably read "My son is okay working hard, but he wants to do it on his own schedule. What kind of jobs don't require set schedules?"
The answer to which totally depends on his level of experience and skill set. But in general, not many and vanishingly few for junior folks.
Not necessarily on his own schedule, just not a full 9-5 every single day of the week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working for yourself. Writer. Professor. Consultant. You may need to work some hours between 9-5 but you have a lot of flexibility.
I'd argue that a consultant isn't all that flexible. You're beholden to the whims of your clients, including being available when they expect you to be - in person or otherwise. Plus, junior consultants don't get to chart their own course and need to earn their stripes through lots of hours usually spent colocated with either the client or colleagues.
OP is asking the wrong question. It should probably read "My son is okay working hard, but he wants to do it on his own schedule. What kind of jobs don't require set schedules?"
The answer to which totally depends on his level of experience and skill set. But in general, not many and vanishingly few for junior folks.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a 911 call taker/Police Dispatcher. I work 12s, I just worked this weekend but next week I only work 12 hours Weds and 8 on Thurs. that’s it. 3 day weekend every other weekend. Any time I work OT or a holiday I bank hours instead of pay. This allows for extra time off in addition to what is accrued.
Anonymous wrote:Working for yourself. Writer. Professor. Consultant. You may need to work some hours between 9-5 but you have a lot of flexibility.
Anonymous wrote:Working for yourself. Writer. Professor. Consultant. You may need to work some hours between 9-5 but you have a lot of flexibility.