sillymcnasty wrote: » Companies have busy months where they need an extra set of hands but don't want to shell out for benefits, holidays, insurance, 401k, etc. After they're done with them, kick em to the curb. That's my assumption.
RHEL wrote: » I'm not a contractor, but my company will have sent me to 5-6 total weeks of paid training this year alone. As some 1 week classes can be upwards of $5,000 for the course alone (plus travel, lodging, meals), you can see how quickly this adds up. Are they risking me taking all of this knowledge and running? Sure. They're also taking a risk that investing in me and making me as knowledgeable as I can be will benefit the company and inspire me to stick around.
techie2018 wrote: » I think most of you guys missed my point. I'm not really talking about paid training. I'm meant on the job training. I've seen companies hire people that didn't really have the skillset the job required coming in the door. They allow that person to learn almost all the skills on the job for a year. Basically because the person didn't have the skillset walking in the door they were a high paid intern for a year. However after that year of on the job training a lot of these guys became really good especially considering their lack of experience. And yet the company let them walk. And the company would start the process all over again.
EnderWiggin wrote: » I think the better question is "Why do they hire unqualified people?"