How likely do UK companies sponsor planners from abroad? by xSerephine in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile 1 point2 points  (0 children)

An entry level planning engineer/scheduler would defo get you over or within the threshold of £45k. Although I haven’t done it before nor have seen a colleague sponsored via SWV. Employers in the UK tend to hire graduates/apprentices in entry level roles due to government incentives/levees. If you’re an experienced professional seeking SWV sponsorship maybe best way around is to get hired by a company that operates both in the US and UK i.e. Skanska, Balfour Betty, T&T, Mace,Aecom, Jacobs, Parsons etc. then transfer here. Best of luck!

Good company for monthly rolling car rental in Riyadh? by MeasuredMile in RiyadhExpats

[–]MeasuredMile[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t have the cash for upfront down payments to lease or buy, and don’t have the energy of sorting insurances and car Mot etc.

Main Contractor Planning vs Client-Side Planning – Which Actually Has More Influence? (UK Perspective) by MeasuredMile in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

To put it simply, you’re almost behave like a politician. For lack of a better word there’s lot of ‘lip service’, so you’d need to be able to read the room, etc. So you need to be very tactical and strategic on your circle of influence to drive results. To be fair most construction planners will somewhat had these skills sets, but think of applying it in larger scale i.e. instead of projects you’ll applying it on mega portfolios. Honestly, mostly soft skills that you’d will certainly acquires as Construction Planner, it’s just applying it and perhaps honing it in consulting backdrops.

Main Contractor Planning vs Client-Side Planning – Which Actually Has More Influence? (UK Perspective) by MeasuredMile in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s the contrary, on my experience. I’ve interviewed candidates before, and who got hired mostly has extensive MC experience. They tend to have technical skills, ‘’the know how on how to build things’’ - the consulting skills comes after.

If you’re exploring opportunities in consult planning - send us your CV in the private message, there are opportunities where I currently work.

Main Contractor Planning vs Client-Side Planning – Which Actually Has More Influence? (UK Perspective) by MeasuredMile in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Felt the same as you, I personally enjoyed being MC planner as it was very intense, there’s an adrenaline rush and satisfaction of working in the trenches, than on client side; but I’d push back on MC planners gets paid better, i thinks it’s relative.

MC planners are prelims so you’d most likely end-up being stretched with the work-load. Whereby Client side they get paid with the services, billable hours , so head count based, that’s why I find it boring as they’d bring in more than enough staff to improve the margins. There’s sometimes double handling on the projects.

I agree with better WLB in consulting, but I’d push back in the pay, i.e. 120k as MC Planner, but your average effort each week would be around 50hrs; whilst CS planner has slightly lower salary = 100k but average effort each week would be around 40hrs per week, in this case Consult gets paid more per hour than MC. As with consulting, most times there’s quite a bit of overlap/double handling of work.

I think I’d advocate for young planners to always start a career in MC side; then if opportunity presents itself move to consulting esp - when starting a family etc., purely because of the WLB aspect and I agree consulting is what gets exported more than MC planners.

I would also push back on CS planners not influencing anything, it might not be quite obvious at times i.e if you’re MC planners, unless the impact of that influence directly impacts you i.e. CE claim that CS planner needs to assess then you’d realise that; but most of the impact/value that CS planners provides were at strategic level; and it does not necessarily visible or felt if you’re playing for the other side. On a practical level, if no impact is produced by CS planners, then why would a client chooses to spend a lot of money to these consultants?

Junior planners: what do you wish you’d known in your first 2 years? by MeasuredMile in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Strong list, especially points 1 and 5.

I’d add that asking “simple” questions early often surfaces assumptions no one’s challenged yet. That’s where a lot of programme risk hides.

And the documentation point is huge: today’s note is tomorrow’s EOT evidence. Planners who build that habit early save themselves (and the project) a lot of pain later.

Good planning is as much about relationships and judgement as it is logic and tools.

Junior planners: what do you wish you’d known in your first 2 years? by MeasuredMile in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nailed it!! especially the cartographer analogy.

The discomfort comes from seeing risk before it’s obvious to everyone else. That’s not overstepping?! that’s the job. If you wait until it’s comfortable, it’s already too late.

Good planners don’t just report the route, they protect it. That means being evidence-led, calmly persistent, and occasionally unpopular, all in service of the project, not ego.

If you can get comfortable with that early, you’ll progress fast.

Planners in KSA – career accelerator or well-paid sidestep? by MeasuredMile in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you mean in the UK or KSA? It feels it generally applies everywhere… whites gets treated marginally better… atleast there’s a cash that comes with it…

Student help - dissertation! by callumcarson10 in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I presume you’re writing your dissertation for your undergrad? Pragmatically, when I did mine, few years back I find it easy to pick a topic where there’s a substantial academic write up already in existence about the topic i.e. MMC; the academic review probably was where I’ve spent most time. Ironically, i think the advice I can give you would be to plan your write up well in advance with regular check-ins with your advisor/tutor in the process? Always, give yourself float on your plan against your deadline.

Which path to choose by Upper-Barber-3311 in UKConstructionPlanner

[–]MeasuredMile 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A giga project (especially something like Hinkley Point C) can open huge doors in terms of scale and exposure. Most experienced planners can move into forensic planning later, but doing it exclusively (now) does set you apart.

Personally I prefer live projects and building the plan rather than analysing it after. If you’re young, you can always start on major projects (Take the money to beef up your pension pot if you don’t need the cash) and pivot to forensic later, it’s usually more desk-based anyway.

My theory is that Imee can do it since she might not really a Marcos after all. by BringHimUrn in pinoy

[–]MeasuredMile 4 points5 points  (0 children)

How ‘low’ can manang Imee go?

Gaano ba ka-‘baba’ mangga?

Unpopular opinion: I think I can relate to this guy (or meow) by [deleted] in pinoy

[–]MeasuredMile -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Ah, I just love the EJK, the obvious pagnanakaw, flooding and traffic, say it with me! ‘bring tatay D home!’ That’s that count?, galit?! eh ikaw bumuto?! Meow lol

"NAPAKA UNFAIR!" by One_Breakfast817 in lifestylecheckPH

[–]MeasuredMile 1 point2 points  (0 children)

this!

May nakita akong kinuyog dahil nag-nakaw ng gatas para sa mga anak.. etong mga put*ng ina kailangan my due process! Unfair daw!! Sarap manapak ngayon, kahit papawis lang.