If You Had A Twin, But Didn't Realise...
Family Life20 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by *ALFIE*. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.One of the problems (or benefits, depending on your view) ALFIE is that work from employment agencies is, by it's very nature, temporary. You, the employee, are always the last to know about where and when you will be working. Some people love it, some can't cope with the uncertainty. There is nothing to stop you registering with another agency, but it creates two problems. One is that with either agency your will not always be available to work because you will be working for the other. In the agencies eyes this makes you unreliable, and therefore further down the food chain when it comes to being offered assignments. The second is that it creates a problem in terms of tax and NI because you are effectively working for two companies at the same time.
On the whole I would say that agencies like you to be faithful to them and frown upon you joining others. I would also say that a good agency will always place people and have a variety of contracts on the go. Remember that it's in the agencies own interest to keep you working because they, as well as you, are only paid while you are!