A cut-and-dry answer for a French citizen whose tax status isn't an issue (until now).
Thursday, December 22, 2016
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
How IT contractors can get more out of technology recruiters
A from the shadows account about what really goes on inside agents' minds.
Making Tax Digital – a contractor's guide
Shuddering at the thought of ‘quarterly accounting' is fine; not prepping for it isn't.
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
How the IT pay cap operates on the NHS
Who enforces the cap; where it's set and what it means for your daily rate.
NHS IT agency foresees PSCs moving to brollies
Many health service IT contractors tipped to turn to umbrellas before April.
Monday, December 19, 2016
Contractors' Questions: Is invoicing and red tape with a US client taxing?
Top tips for a Plan B contractor whose American gig might be a minefield.
Life as a contractor: the good, the bad and the ugly
Succeeding at contracting is far easier if you understand its risks and rewards.
Friday, December 16, 2016
Why PSCs won't want HMRC to see them in distress
Decoding the Autumn Statement pledge on insolvency that's gone under the radar.
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Seven questions to ask contract IT job agencies
Don't brand yourself as from the awkward squad -- but do ask any new agent the following.
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
IT contractor market heading for a traditional Christmas
Runaway demand seems far from on the cards this festive season.
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
EU data rules giving CEOs the fear factor
Most corporate bosses worry about GDPR; but not whether it bites or not.
Monday, December 12, 2016
Offshore scheme users face requirement to notify
Going forward to HMRC, when the scheme provider hasn't, will be your duty.
IR35 reform MP accused over mileage expenses
Critic of the Intermediaries rules faces flak of his own due to claiming while abroad.
Friday, December 9, 2016
Contractors' Questions: How to make my two properties less taxing?
Mitigating stamp duty isn't possible; circumventing it all together is -- IFA.
Thursday, December 8, 2016
Contractors' Questions: Any IR35 risk to health and safety course?
Status expert urges a PSC to put up strong resistance -- to HMRC; not his client.
NHS boss 'orders a stop to payments to PSCs'
Managers operating via companies should no longer be paid, hospitals told.
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Contractors' Questions: Who's caught by April's IR35 changes?
In a nutshell: how IR35 reform affects your PSC, your agent and your public client.
Free webinar on the new IR35 rules from April 2017
Join Orange Genie for the lowdown on IR35 changes in the public sector.
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Four new IR35 documents you should read right now
Taxman's PDF medley is almost essential (if not light) reading for all PSCs.
Contractors' IR35 status to rest with public sector clients
Draft IR35 legislation puts the new liability on end-users, not agencies.
Monday, December 5, 2016
A new contractor's guide to self-assessment
Six steps to help keep the taxman off your back when filing your first tax return.
Contractor body calls to define self-employment
Setting 'self-employment' in stone will help a host of separate probes into them.
Friday, December 2, 2016
Contractors' Questions: How to get paid if my client's in Australia?
Being located Down Under doesn't put those who owe you out of reach.
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Staff body backs worker tax arrangements probe
A pledge to explore differing tax treatment where the work is the same is welcomed.
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
IR35 changes: Gird your loins, but don't panic
Rumours of the death of public sector PSC contracting are being greatly exaggerated.
When I met chancellor Hammond after AS 2016
Working on how our sector is perceived could pay a different kind of dividend.
IR35 changes: Gird your loins, but don't panic
Rumours of the death of public sector PSC contracting are being greatly exaggerated.
Tuesday, November 29, 2016
Contractors' Questions: What will a health check via my company cover?
Private medical pointers for a PSC eyeing chiropractic and X-ray services.
Contractors' Questions: What will a health check via my company cover?
Private medical pointers for a PSC eyeing chiropractic and X-ray services.
Hammond's AS 2016 'a bit of a yawn' on avoidance
Sheer weight of £450m in avoidance measures explains one adviser's fatiguing feeling.
Monday, November 28, 2016
ContractorUK Reader Awards 2016: vote now!
Your chance to pay recognition to those who excel in the IT contractor marketplace.
Contractors Questions How to tell good agencies from bad
Eight characteristics you'll want your next recruiter to have (and eight you won't).
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Autumn Statement 2016: Contractor Case Study
How much IR35 with no 5% expenses allowance could cost you from April 2017.
Autumn Statement 2016: Contractors' Guide
In-depth takeaways for PSCs from the chancellor's anti-contractor package.
How contractor finances fared at AS 2016
IFA reveals where chancellor Hammond helped you out, or hit your pocket.
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
Hammond heaps on more anti-contractor measures
IR35 reform approved; VAT FRS raided, new schemes targeted and incorporation is next.
Autumn Statement 2016 – chancellor's full speech
Philip Hammond's first (and last) AS hits incorporation and false self-employment earnings.
Autumn Statement 2016: Contractors' Checklist
Tick of the chancellor's most likely announcements as they happen.
IR35 research subjects make charges against HMRC
Naïve; disingenuous and heading for a fiasco -- say the taxman's own status advisers.
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
How to Get Your Employees to Really Tell You What They Think
Ben Franklin once wrote in his annual Poor Richard’s Almanack that “the same man cannot be both friend and flatterer.” Oftentimes we’re so focused on not hurting our friends’ feelings that we flatter them instead of giving them the cold hard truth.
And why wouldn’t you give them the cold hard truth? Because you know that they will most likely hold some sort of a grudge against you after the fact.
To anyone who’s ever given their best friend a hard dose of truth: much respect. But for the rest of us who find it hard to give constructive criticism, we’re paralyzed when it comes time to talk.
For this case, however, anonymity is the cure.
It’s not easy to tell someone how you feel, especially when it’s straight to their face. This is a problem for both you and the recipient, since you need to get your feelings off your chest, and they need to hear it to become a better person.
It’s not just a problem for personal relationships, but for businesses as well. A major problem for companies is receiving honest feedback from their employees. Businesses want to know the brutal truth– how employees feel about their superiors, how the business could be more efficient, and so forth.
The truth is that companies aren’t going to get genuine answers from handwritten notes, emails, or even face-to- face discussions (particularly when a relationship between the manager and subordinate isn’t on solid footing) since employees are worried about getting fired or becoming the target of future abuse. Though fear isn’t the only reason employees aren’t keen on speaking up. Futility, according to a 2009 Cornell National Survey, was found to be 1.8 times more common a reason than fear for not sharing ideas and feelings to direct supervisors in large corporate settings.
So what’s the solution?
Well, for one, online voting tools that utilize anonymous surveys, polls, and forms is a start. Anonymity gives employees the freedom to dig deep and discuss feelings that are true to their core, while the survey template allows companies to ask about any topic they desire, in addition to having a central repository of feedback that can be analyzed for common issues and subsequent action.
Without anonymity or an organized system to aggregate data, a mirage may exist around the office that everything is fine, and that employees are happy. Anything that does end up being shared by employees also runs the risk of not being followed through with, which only heightens the futility aspect.
Surveys, especially anonymous ones, do a few positive things for the office:
Telling the truth makes employees feel better.
Just like venting to a friend can help ease our pain, writing our feelings in a survey or poll gets it off our chest. We’re now hopeful that our words can spur change around the office, amongst our superiors, or for the broader company as a whole. In short, employee morale improves through the answering of a few questions.
Surveys are more precise.
When an employee says they aren’t happy, it’s hard to gauge that in our minds. However if we ask them how unhappy they are on a scale of 1 to 10, this changes everything. A four on that scale, while still surprising, isn’t as alarming as an eight or nine. Using anonymous voting and survey tools, we can get more detailed responses with a combination of binary, scale, and open-ended questions.
One of the supposed problems with online surveys is that following up with employees is nearly impossible. But this is just an assumption. Managers should be reviewing the results of surveys, though they don’t have to be the only ones.
After survey results are gathered, it’s pertinent to go over those results with the team. A big meeting to discuss answers amongst those in the office is an opportunity for managers and employees to dig deeper into certain responses without directly singling anyone out.
But it all comes back to anonymity—that’s the key to honest answers. If you want to really know what your employees think, look into utilizing an anonymous feedback system for your company.
UK will be G20's least taxing nation, firms told
Theresa May commits to setting corporation tax at a record low.
Cover firms' bills for quarterly tax reporting, HMRC told
One-man bands facing 'MTD' deserve 'whatever amount of financial support' they need.
Monday, November 21, 2016
End the war on contractors, Hammond urged
Plea to chancellor to stop punishing contractors every Spring and Autumn.
Why it's no longer a case of best contractor gets the job
Phone not ringing off the hook with offers? It's your marketing, stupid.
Friday, November 18, 2016
Contractors' Questions: How to do a one-day job in Switzerland?
When a short stint overseas can be long on compliance.
Thursday, November 17, 2016
IR35 reform 'to rob public sector of 9,720 IT contractors'
Government's 18,000-strong IT contractor workforce to be cut in half from April – IPSE.
HMRC targets temporary staff tax avoidance schemes
Routing agency temps through companies for VAT & NI EA doesn't work, taxman insists.
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Autumn Statement 2016: Contractors' Wishlist
What an adviser to contractors hopes to hear from Hammond on Wednesday.