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Looking for work? Be careful!

June 12, 2009 in Contractor News, Life

I came across this article online via twitter, “Controlling your online image“. Whilst the article is probably aimed at all forms of work seeking, it is also very important to consider if you’re a Contractor/Freelancer. It’s a competitive market out there and everyone needs to be professional as the slightest (often innocent comment, “I am so hungover and can’t face work”) can be picked up online so easily.

I guess it could mean there is a period where you have to really think about your professional brand and make sure that it is seperate from the personal life. Don’t worry the irony is not lost on me as I happily promote @robborover on twitter!

Happy hunting.

Lib Dems helping Contractors?

June 6, 2009 in Contractor News, Industry comment, Tax

We reported on the Parasol site that Lib Dems seem to putting some effort into working for Contractors, no bad thing. There are even some Labour MP’s signing up!

Grumpy Umbrellas.com

May 28, 2009 in Contractor News, Industry comment, Life, Recruiter News

As an “expert” on FreelanceSupermarket.com I get to answer some Umbrella related questions and put my 2p’s worth in. On the forum, I noted a thread that stated just how frustrated some icognito Umbrella Company staff get with daft questions. It provides Contractors with an insight into the operation of an Umbrella and I don’t think they are from Parasol by the nature of the response :-) Could be wrong though! Anyway, seems some people can really wind customer service staff up and we all hope for respect and patience but when it is peoples livelihoods, it can get stressful. I can promise all Parasol contractors that we never go out of our way to make it difficult, it’s just not worth it but there are a number of interactions in the “food chain”. This can create a blame type tone if you’re not careful and we really do try to avoid that.

In other news our sister company Quay Accounting has a shiny new website – I think it looks good and is only phase 1 of a cunning plan, more to follow! I would say this, but the service with fixed price expert accounting is great value for money at £75 (+vat) per month – fully inclusive!

Skills… dull or needed?

May 7, 2009 in Contractor News, Industry comment, Life

As a Contractor I always found it difficult to find the time/motivation to embrace keeping my skills up to date. All the books, guides and common sense tells us that we should do this but taking time off or giving up the weekend – it always seemed a luxury rather than a necessary and with plenty of work about – what was the point?

Fast forward to 2009 and I still get reports telling me of long term skill shortages in the UK and we are still (albeit less) bringing people in to the UK to fulfill roles. I would add that these are professional/technical roles and not related (imo) to the stereotype of “cheap imports”, far from it.

I noted this comment in a report this week, “There is some indication that skill shortages also seem to be slightly more of a problem for the two groups that have made the biggest headcount cuts since August – larger organisations and technology and media firms. This suggests that some organisations within these groups might have cut back too severely since August.”  This report is not unique – I have seen many saying the same thing.

So in the real world – what can be done? My advice (for what it is worth) is to do plenty of research on skills gaps and job requirements being published that are outside your normal sphere and probably outside your comfort zone.  It does not mean that a course in Ruby will get you the chief architects job at Twitter but a plan on making yourself more valuable and wider can’t be a bad move? It may also be, that a non-technical area of improvement could bring advantages.

Now more than ever – there is a need to find some energy and motivation to improve ourselves and remain valuable to Recruitment Agents and Clients. Training can be flexible, is usually tax deductible and for those with a Ltd Co – regional grants still exist.

Train to gain is the cliché – but it’s true.

HMRC Slip Expense changes in….

April 15, 2009 in Business Expenses, Contractor News, Industry comment, Tax

Easter saw HMRC publish a paper which attempts to deal with standard expense levels for food & drink (subsistence) when working on temporary assignments (contracting).  This “quiet” release has not made the headlines as yet as a) it is not exactly draconian (and therefore anti economy) and b) does not entirely effect people from day one.

It does however mean that an employer (umbrella company) without a dispensation can choose to use a set rate of expenses for “subsistence”.  It also probably means that a new umbrella company might have a harder time applying for a dispensation.  To gain a dispensation the employer should carry out detailed sampling of expenses to prove to HMRC that expense levels are accurate and genuine (in simple terms). The new benchmark rates published mean that this does not need to be carried out and a standard fixed rate can be used (but with some tougher caveats).

  1. the travel must be in the performance of an employee’s duties or to a temporary place of work
  2. the employee should be absent from his normal place of work or home for a continuous period in excess of five hours or ten hours
  3. the employee should have incurred a cost on a meal (food and drink) after starting the journey

I also interpret the above as a way of HMRC being able to check for patterns in employees claiming of expenses, will someone claiming lunch every day of the week for three months relate to point 1? Is the travel necessary (and therefore the expense) or is it simply commuting as any employee would do?

A welcome change is the removal of “Friends & Family” Allowance in new dispensations and is also not included in these new rates. Being able to claim for staying at a friends or family whilst contracting has in my opinion, been widely abused and therefore HMRC have acted to remove it, “HMRC has reviewed this policy and concluded that there is no legal basis for giving tax relief because it is not linked to any specific underlying expense.”

Umbrella Companies with existing dispensations will be affected by these changes but only at the point in which they are reviewed. This therefore relates to my earlier point in that not everyone will be affected from day one (which by the way was 6th April 2009) as dispensations are usually reviewed on a 3 – 5 year cycle.  Parasol contractors for instance won’t be affected and even when our own dispensation is up for review, we are still able to apply for a renewal. We have a near 10 year track record of being an employer with a true employment model and exacting expense management/audit processes.

So… who wins? HMRC I guess will be able to suggest this route rather than allowing dispensations and less expense abuse should occur.  Some genuine Contractors will lose out in terms of take home pay if they use a “cheap” solution that adopts this scale rate approach.  It’s not yet creating a level playing field (you still see expense dispensations promoted as sales tools) but probably is a start on the groundwork.

Yet Another Expenses Blog

April 1, 2009 in Business Expenses, Contractor News, Industry comment, Tax

April 22nd 2009 could be another milestone in Contracting / Freelancers as Mr. Darling announces the 2009 Budget.

Potentially buried in the detail will be some further changes to expenses whereby HMRC may get around to introducing UK wide fixed “scale rates“.  As part of this new approach, “in response to concerns from some employers and professional advisers about consistency between what is agreed for different employers, HMRC also proposes to standardise the different scale rates that it will agree with employers.”

It could therefore mean the end of some dubious practices by some Umbrella Companies that claim very high % returns to Contractors on a basis of claiming expense levels that in some cases are not incurred and in others as a result of “good” negotiation with a local inspector.  I blogged on this in 2007 and many times since and this aggressive stance (abuse of expenses imo) may have come home to roost. It should create a level playing field whereby service and value for money are what Contractors focus on and not risky expense policies. I live in hope!

The baby has grown up…

March 19, 2009 in Contractor News, Industry comment

In the latter part of 1999 I started coding (in Perl!) the then Parasol admin web site and in Feb 2000 it went live. Fast forward to 2009 and our very latest incarnation has gone live with over 60% of our users already migrated. Seems the baby has grown up and I haven’t been anywhere near a piece of code in years!!

Check out the “guide” – seems a bit slicker than a printf statement!