Not what I'm saying. The client wants the job done at minimum risk to himself, irrespective of any other considerations. So having an assymetric notice period is to his benefit and not yours. Good for IR35 (a little), but not necessarily good business practice - think of the plumber analogy: you want him to finish the job, but you want to be able to dump him quickly if he's messing about.
It makes more sense if you are delivering something, rather than providing manpower, of course, but in the end it is basically a good thing
It makes more sense if you are delivering something, rather than providing manpower, of course, but in the end it is basically a good thing



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