Originally posted by MoodyBlue
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Well, as mentioned elsewhere, welcome to the bonkers world of IR35. You're right in many ways, but you just need to try and make sure there is a clear difference between how you are treated and how the perms are treated. For instance, you don't want to be receiving performance reviews from the boss! But yeah, it's quite a tightrope and I'm certainly no expert, so it's probably best I say no more on it, as I'm a newbie to all of this too and finding my way along as I go.
For your last point, you want the schedule to at least state a broad outline of what it is you are to do. "Deliver x" and "Develop Y to do Z". This is some sort of small evidence that you are there for a specific task as opposed to doing whatever is thrown at you each day, plus it gives you the opportunity to turn work down if it is not related to why you were hired in the first place ("Sorry, I'm only here to do do-and-so, doing this other piece of work is not in my contact").
Without a schedule, in theory you are there to do whatever you are told to do, then you're basically just a permie being directed/controlled by the client and therefore inside IR35.
And if it wasn't discussed earlier (sorry, haven't read whole thread), you can buy insurance for IR35 investigations. Look at QDOS (TLC35), AbbeyTax (Survive35) and others I'm sure. Not guaranteed, as nothing is when talking about HMRC, but it's all a roll of the dice to one extent or another. Meh.


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