Monthly Archives: December 2019

Over half of self-employed don’t even know what IR35 is

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Over half of the self-employed in Britain don’t know what IR35 is, despite being the people being most affected by it, according to research.
HMRC wants to bring thousands of freelance contractors who are effectively full-time employees within PAYE, in an effort to tackle what the taxman sees is “disguised employment”. Responsibility for assessing the tax status of self-employed contractors is due to shift from the contractor to the company that hires them.
The legislation, which has been heavily criticised by tax experts and business as being poorly conceived, badly implemented by HMRC and could reduce a worker’s net income by up to 25 per cent, is set to roll out in April 2020.
Accounting software provider FreeAgent surveyed 2,000 self-employed workers about small business taxation.
>See also: Small businesses call for HMRC to delay IR35 tax change
IR35 review
The Conservatives, Labour, the Liberal Democrats and Scottish National Party (SNP) have all pledged to review IR35 – although only the Lib Dems and SNP explicitly committed to a review in their manifesto.
Shadow small business minister Bill Esterson went further, announcing Labour would scrap IR35 being extended to the private sector before backtracking.
At the weekend, Chancellor Sajid Javid confirmed

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5 worst startup ideas and 7 ways to make sure your business gets funded

Originally written by Mike Lebus on Small Business
After 15 years of looking through business pitches on the AIN platform, you get very quick at analysing investment opportunities and spotting the worst startup ideas. The most common theme is that the entrepreneur clearly hasn’t given their business enough thought to refine it for launch and certainly not enough to inspire an investor.
With this in mind, I am going to list five reasons why an investor might say no, and give real examples of some of the worst startup ideas that we’ve received over the years. It won’t surprise you to learn none of them turned into viable businesses.
>See also: Q&A – Sarah Turner, Angel Academe: ‘Women tend to talk more honestly about their business’
5 of the worst startup ideas…
#1 – Trying to solve a problem that doesn’t exist
One entrepreneur thought it would be a good idea to design shoes with TV screens in them. The rest of us realise there simply is no desire for people to walk around watching TV in their shoes. It’s pretty easy to see why this one never made its way onto the shop shelves.
#2 – The business is immoral or unethical
Investors tend to prefer to

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