A group of young businesspeople with smartphone standing in office, expressing excitement.
IR35 POSTPONED UNTIL 2021

During closing speeches on 17th of March, as a part of economic measures related to Coronavirus situation, the UK Government announced that IR35 for private sector will not come into effect until April 2021.

This is hugely appreciated by the contractors but the question is how much it will affect the private sector giants like banks and retailers who were offering the big chunk of contractor roles before. Most of them had followed a blanket approach earlier regarding the PSC (Personal Service Companies) and people who can only work as a self-employed (e.g. Ankara Agreement – ECAA Turkish Businessperson Visa Holders) and asked them to go either under PAYE or leave.

After the news of the IR35 being postponed, some companies may choose to re-hire contractors but since most have already moved to umbrella companies and there are other financial implications of back-stepping from those umbrella company-client agreements, many are expected to go ahead as if IR35 is in place as the changes are only deferred not cancelled.

On the other hand, even if some big companies decide to offer contractor roles for another year, the same problem will be waiting just around the corner. Self-employed contractors will need to find either small companies to work with or outside IR35 roles next year again.

If you are unsure about what options you may have, please contact us so that we can discuss the possible paths you can take and what we can offer as Startup HR Consultants.

We are currently working on several positions especially in the ‘Software Development’, maybe some would be suitable for you? Do not hesitate to drop an e-mail to info@silvertonhr.co.uk

Team of developers
Getting Startup Recruitment Right

In our last article at Silverton HR, we covered a little of the challenge and opportunity presented by startup HR and getting it right (Why HR is needed from day one for a Startup). A critical part of startup HR is startup recruitment. A small but vital team can only grow effectively if the best match is made in a new hire. Bringing in the wrong new employees can throw a startup team so far off the rails business failure ensues. In contrast, the perfect new hire can add an exponential amount to a team dynamic.

As per McKinsey, a study of 600,000 researchers, entertainers, politicians and athletes found high performers are 400% more productive than average ones. A study of the relationship between quality of talent and business performance found the result to be “drastic.” This increase in productivity, of the right hire, rises with job complexity:

“Managers, software developers, and the like – high performers are an astounding 800% more productive.”

Apple’s Steve Jobs, talking about the importance of the right talent, said:

“Go after the cream of the cream. A small team of A+ players can run circles around a giant team of B and C players.”

Recruitment, done right, is time intensive. From preparing contracts, offers, and job descriptions through to writing adverts, and processing responses, the recruitment process takes hours and any skimping or impulsive decision-making during the process could miss the perfect hire. It’s also stressful for existing team members. And, if you are recruiting in an industry where there is a skills gap, job advertising costs will be higher as will be the opportunity cost of an empty vacancy when recruitment takes time.

Andrew Stoe, Head of Talent at popular workflow and collaboration platform Asana, says choosing a specific type of recruiter can help turn a company into a “recruiting machine.” Stoe says:

“If you’re a founder and you’re looking for a great startup recruiter, you want to find someone who has the ambition to really build a company.”

He explains that startup recruiters have a certain skill set and that if they really have the drive to help a startup succeed and are a great recruiter then:

“They’ll want to know everything that’s going on within the company, from the product roadmap, sales numbers and metrics to the history on each employee and why they joined your company.”

Stoe believes a recruiter’s enthusiasm “will come through,” to new hires and that the ideal time to contract a startup recruiter is once a company surpasses 15 employees. He says founders should still be involved but they can take advantage of the economies of scale a startup recruiter benefits from.

Specialist startup recruiters are experts, have access to a pool of candidates, the ability to headhunt, and the knowledge and breadth to discover and lever the best places to advertise for the most capable talent.

No matter how many employees an infant company has, a startup recruiter has the dedicated time to search, match, and assess candidates. For startup founders and CEOs this clears all important time to concentrate on critical revenue generation.

https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/organization/our-insights/attracting-and-retaining-the-right-talent

https://firstround.com/review/Asana-Head-of-Talent-on-the-secrets-to-finding-a-great-startup-recruiter/

Why HR is needed from day one for a startup

One of the biggest challenges for startups is encompassing all the key operational functions of a business within a small team that must be ultimately focused on bottom-line revenue. For startups and small businesses directly employing an HR professional is often a goal on the long-term horizon. But, startups need good human resources practices and processes from day one as much as larger companies need comprehensive HR operations every day.

It’s the team that turns a startup into a successful enterprise and that team’s culture that drives future fortune. Laying the right human resource foundations for a new team to protect against later problems is vital. As is developing a recruitment strategy so that new hires are a perfect fit to the existing team dynamic and don’t disrupt essential workflow and revenue generation. In a small team every micro and macro impact is felt more heavily than in larger companies where, for example, a bad hire might not even have met every colleague before they move on.

 “Make something people want” includes making a company that people want to work for.”

Sahil Lavingia, founder of Gumroad.

CB Insights analysed 101 failed startups, conducting postmortems to assess the reason for failure and came up with the top 20 reasons. As many as 23% of startups failed because they didn’t have the right team and 13% because of team or investor disharmony. Other HR issues were right up there too, including a lack of passion at 9% or lost focus at 13%. Though these latter issues may stem from founder’s, motivation for everyone is won or lost via team dynamics.

Investors and startup incubators and accelerators too prefer stable teams rather than small companies with high turnover.  A stable team is much more likely to go the distance and high staff retention is a sign of good and inspiring leadership. HR practices are needed for retention, from overseeing training and development to dealing with issues that crop up and regular evaluations. Generally, employees today expect the HR support of a conglomerate from any sized business.

Employment legislation and good practice is an area that requires expert handling. Startups don’t always put in place the right contracts and employment terms up front and coming to this later in a business life cycle or when facing an issue has serious implications. Laying out terms of employment and expected employee behaviours up front gives employees a known foundation for their working lives, career paths, and colleague and management interactions.

Effective onboarding of a new employee takes time too, startup CEO’s might be inclined to skimp on this process due to time constraints. As growth happens without a dedicated HR function, new employees can be left trying to settle into new roles without complete company buy-in or enough knowledge to perform at their utmost.

There’s also the danger that an enthusiastic founder may oversell company or career prospects or hide the fact that they are in an uphill battle and really need someone with the same commitment as they have to drive the business forward. Presenting a startup accurately but including its potential is important as is communication throughout both a startup and an employee’s journey.

Startup HR is a challenge. Without HR expertise within a new business wearing an HR hat along with every other task a CEO needs to perform just might be too much. There is, however, a solution. Hiring a specialist HR consultancy for startups, or a startup recruiter, ring fences one startup challenge with trusted expertise. It may seem like an investment that can wait but when one considers the importance of team and culture to startup success, and the implication of HR conflicts, then outsourcing HR is an investment that pays long term.

Next, at Silverton HR, we’ll be talking a little more about the importance of getting startup recruitment right and how an HR consultancy and startup recruitment specialist like ourselves can help transform startups into success stories.

https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/241928

https://entrepreneurhandbook.co.uk/hr-for-startups/

https://www.cbinsights.com/research/startup-failure-reasons-top/

https://insights.som.yale.edu/insights/even-small-businesses-need-corporate-governance

Silverton HR

HR Consultancy for Startups

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