Originally posted by ladymuck
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Previously on "Old consultant considering going back to contracting after 3 year 'Perm' break..."
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Contract-wise, I'd start with a template from Qdos or IPSE as that'll be off to a good start.
Then make the schedule to the contract, or SOW if you prefer, be as water tight as possible as to the exact deliverables. No 'ad hoc as required' nonsense.
Also consider making it fixed price (plus expenses!) and then billing in stages rather than on a day rate basis. So look at the gig as a package with checkpoints / stages / milestones that you need to hit and get agreement on before you can invoice.
Changes in scope should require a change to the schedule/SOW, or an addendum, with the charge for the extra work added onto what you've already quoted.
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Originally posted by ReallyTallTony View PostHello,
I am currently permanently employed (for 3+years) with a company. I contracted for many years prior to this (Pre IR35). An old client has asked me to help, on a contract/consultant basis to help 'break up' the organisation, selling parts etc. Expected to be a 2 year contract.
I am wary of IR35 and potential pitfalls. But being outside of IR35 is known to be tax-efficient.
The new role is to:- Maintain operational aspects (governance of suppliers etc)
- Advise/resolve on contract and supplier challenges during the divesting of the company
Imagine if the client went out to an external provider, there would be a very clear list of things to do for the supplier to quote for and deliver to get paid. You need something similar.
You need to avoid a job description and anything woolly that would indicate you just sit at a desk and do what the client says until it's over.
As there are operational elements, does this fall into IR35 status automatically?
Because I am contracting directly (no intermediary) what should I be aware of?
Also direct you don't have factoring so you maybe at the mercy of their B2B payment terms which could be up to 90 days.
If your job is to break the company up are you sure you are going to get paid towards the end I guess?
Ltd Company Vs Sole trader - which is best?
What should I be considering
How can IR35 review companies help? Writing the contract for example?
Appreciate your thoughts and educated opinions please.Last edited by northernladuk; 27 January 2022, 12:23.
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Old consultant considering going back to contracting after 3 year 'Perm' break...
Hello,
I am currently permanently employed (for 3+years) with a company. I contracted for many years prior to this (Pre IR35). An old client has asked me to help, on a contract/consultant basis to help 'break up' the organisation, selling parts etc. Expected to be a 2 year contract.
I am wary of IR35 and potential pitfalls. But being outside of IR35 is known to be tax-efficient.
The new role is to:- Maintain operational aspects (governance of suppliers etc)
- Advise/resolve on contract and supplier challenges during the divesting of the company
Questions:- As there are operational elements, does this fall into IR35 status automatically?
- Because I am contracting directly (no intermediary) what should I be aware of?
- Ltd Company Vs Sole trader - which is best?
- What should I be considering
- How can IR35 review companies help? Writing the contract for example?
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