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Students working in term-time and holidays

January 21st, 2010   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

We often get asked by student Mashers about their tax status and we are not surprised in the slightest that you are confused. We are too but we do have some clarity on it so that you can plan accordingly.

In a nutshell -  if you are a registered student and have completed a P38S tax form and you ONLY work in Summer, Xmas and Easter holidays then you don’t get taxed at source.

However if you do ANY work outside of holiday periods then this cancels out the tax free status and you will be taxed at source on ALL earnings throughout the year.

harsh we know…but the law.

Please also bear in mind though that you will have be able to get your tax back on all earnings under £6475.00 if we are your main employer and therefore will be eligible for a tax-rebate at the end of the year after you receive your P60 confirming the amount.

and now from the horse’s mouth…the Inland Revenue…zzzzzzzz

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“There are special rules about tax for students who only work in the Easter, summer, and Christmas holidays. These special rules do not apply if you also work at other times. If you work at other times, the special rules will not apply to any of your earnings, from holiday work or other work.

So if you are a student, and you do paid work in term time, the special rules will not apply to you. The normal rules for tax and National Insurance will apply to all your earnings, (term time and holidays) in the same way that they do for other people who are not students.

Working as an employee in term time and the holidays

Income Tax

If you had a previous job, your employer gave you a form P45 when you left. Give this to your new employer.

If you have no form P45, or you left your last job in an earlier tax year, you will need to complete a form P46  instead. Your new employer will provide this form.

Your new employer will use the form P45 or P46 to find out your tax code from the HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC). Using the tax code, your employer can work out correctly any tax you must pay.

If you have more than one job at the same time, you should contact the HMRC to get a different tax code for your second job.

You will only have to pay tax if you earn more than £6,475 in the tax year (6 April 2009 to 5 April 2010). This works out as £125 a week, or £540 a month. The tax code and the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) system spread any tax due across the year as evenly as possible. In this way, if you work throughout the year, you will pay the right amount of tax. If you give up work part way through the year, a refund may be due.

National Insurance Contributions (NICs)

You pay the same NICs whether or not you are a student. Your employer will deduct NICs from your pay if they are due.

NICs will be due for any week in which your gross pay (before deductions of tax and so on) is between £110.01 to £844 per week (£476 and £3,656 a month).

NICs are due on your pay for the week or month, so you will not get a refund if you stop working part way through the tax year.

Working as a self-employed person while you are a student

There are no special tax rules for you if you are a student and also self-employed. You will be treated in the same way as other self-employed people.

You must tell the HMRC if you start working as a self-employed person. Do this by ringing the helpline for the newly self-employed on 08459 15 45 15. You must do this within three months of starting to be self-employed to avoid paying a penalty.

Later, we will send you a tax return, on which you will declare your earnings from being self-employed.

For the full breakdown of details please click on the following link:

http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/students/work_in_term_and_hols_9_1.htm

Self-Employed versus Employed

January 20th, 2010   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

We are often asked why we pay our Brand Ambassadors on a P.A.Y.E (employed) basis and we understand that it is a grey area for many as different agencies have varying approaches to the legislation.

The below guidelines are taken from the Inland Revenue website and will help you (The Mashers) to understand your employment status with us.

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In most cases your employment status will be straightforward. In general terms, you are employed if you work for someone and don’t have the risks of running the business.

You are self-employed if you are in business for yourself and are responsible for the success or failure of that business. To help you check your employment status, answer the following questions.

These also apply if you are a casual or part-time worker. If you have more than one job the same questions apply for each job.

Employed – if you answer yes to most of the questions you are likely to be employed:

• Do you have to do the work yourself?
• Can someone tell you where to work, when to work, how to work or what to do?
• Can someone move you from task to task?
• Do you have to work a set number of hours?
• Are you paid a regular wage or salary?
• Can you get overtime pay or bonus payments?
• Are you responsible for managing anyone else engaged by the person or company that you are working for?

Self-employed – if you answer yes to one or more of the questions you are likely to be self-employed.

• Can you hire someone to do the work, or take on he
lpers at your own expense?
• Can you decide where to provide the services of the job, when to work, how to work
and what to do?
• Can you make a loss as well as a profit?
• Do you agree to do a job for a fixed price regardless of how long the job may take?

If you can’t answer yes to any of the above questions, you are still likely to be self-employed if you can answer yes to most of the following questions.

• Do you risk your own money?
• Do you provide the main items of equipment (not the tools that many employees
provide for themselves) needed to do the job?
• Do you regularly work for a number of different people and require business set up
in order to do so?
• Do you have to correct unsatisfactory work in your own time and at your own expense?

For more information please go to:

http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/leaflets/es-fs1.pdf

Top tips for 2010…

January 14th, 2010   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

As we enter the New Year, here are seven ways to overhaul your life.

1. Find your focus. A life overhaul is usually unnecessary and unrealistic. Establish priorities by imagining yourself a year from now, happy and fulfilled. How do you spend your time? How is it different from today? Identify changes that lay a path to the new way, and concentrate solely on them.

2. Speed through the cycle. For Gestalt psychiatrist Fritz Perls, making a change involves moving through four stages: doing, contemplating, planning and experimenting. Locate yourself in the cycle and take action to progress. Too busy ‘doing’? Take a day off to think. Aimless contemplator? Write a plan.

3. Break it down. Avoid paralysis by turning your long-term vision (‘I’ll make a success of this business’) into manageable, short-term goals (I’ll call 10 lapsed clients by the end of today’).

4. Up the pressure. Share your plan with colleagues, friends and family and ask them to keep tabs on your progress. Skipping a training course won’t be so tempting if your pride is at stake.

5. Remember why. Whether it’s the impulses you’re now satisfying (independence, challenge), the strengths you’re building (leadership, courage), or the passions you’re exploring (politics, the arts), there are reasons you made a change. When the going gets tough, don’t forget them.

6. Learn from the greats. Identify people who achieved what you want to and plot your path against theirs. Too late to change? Emulate Colonel Harland Sanders, who made his new start (and fortune) at 65. When a motorway development shut his service station, Sanders shunned retirement to secure investment in his fried chicken recipe – and KFC was born.

7. Think back. One you’ve settled into the new way, reflect on lessons learned. Write down how you overcame challenges, what skills you developed and how you’d do it differently next time. Use it to make future fresh starts swift and stress-free.

SOURCE::

http://www.managementtoday.co.uk/newsalerts/dailynews/news/975295/Route-Top-Seven-ways-fresh-start/?DCMP=EMC-Daily%20News

Maddie’s cycling across India…

December 14th, 2009   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

Maddie George is taking part in a tough 370km cycling challenge in India to raise funds to help make a difference to those suffering from cancer.

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“I am taking part in the second Big C Cycle Challenge to support the work of four special charities: Marie Curie Cancer Care; Children with Leukaemia; Ovarian cancer action and The Lymphoma Association. I will be among a group of more than 50 people from across the UK who, from 6 – 15 March 2010, will get on their bikes for the challenge. A highlight of my adventurous trip through rural Rajasthan will be a visit to the amazing Taj Mahal followed by a tough five-day cycle ride staying in campsites along the way.

This challenge is very close to my heart and my decision to do this came after I was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in early 2009. In what was the most distressing part of my life, I was given support and hope from friends, strangers and charities like these, this is my way of paying something back to all the people that supported me.

Taking part in this challenge will raise funds for these charities which will enable more people to be supported through life threatening illness.

This is far from a holiday, in fact it will be a 5 day gruelling, bumpy and saddle-aching challenge, but we are doing this for all those affected by cancer and that, along with my supportive cycling buddies, will be what gets me through the cycle ride of a lifetime!

So please dig deep and donate now to help us support 4 life-changing charities: Marie Curie Cancer Care; Children with Leukaemia; Ovarian cancer action and The Lymphoma Association.

http://www.justgiving.com/Madeleine-George

Donating through JustGiving is simple, fast and totally secure. Your details are safe with JustGiving – they’ll never sell them on or send unwanted emails. Once you donate, they’ll send your money directly to the charity and make sure Gift Aid is reclaimed on every eligible donation by a UK taxpayer. So it’s the most efficient way to donate – I raise more, whilst saving time and cutting costs for the charity.

5 Ways to Actually Make Money on TWITTER

December 11th, 2009   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

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What, in 140 characters or fewer, is Twitter?

Well, its a money-losing website made up of very short messages (like this one) where your kids (and C-list celebrities) waste time.

It’s also a popular new medium-tens of millions of users and counting-that businesses use to build brands (and sometimes destroy them).

All this you know. Or you should. But Twitter isn’t just about buzz: Some companies have figured out how to use it for old-fashioned things.

Like, you know, making money. Here are five. Please Retweet.

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You are finally on TWITTER!  Now what?

1. Get listed How is it that some people have two million followers, and you have only two? Well, they are probably famous (sorry) and wound up on Twitter’s “suggested user” list. The list encourages new users to follow the likes of Ashton Kutcher (3.9 million followers) and JetBlue (1.4 million). Faced with charges of favoritism, Twitter now allows anyone to create a list — say, business owners in Cleveland — which makes it easier for the hoi polloi to get noticed.

2. Follow others Don’t underestimate the power of vanity. When you follow people, they get an e-mail alert with a link to your Twitter page. Some, pleased with this development, will follow you back. But use caution: If you follow too many people, you will look like a self-promoter, and they will be less likely to reciprocate.

3. Talk to people Twitter replies are public, which means that when you engage others in conversation, people will see you for the thought-provoking person you are. How to do this gracefully? Look for users with common interests and then send them a message. And if someone tries to talk to you, talk back.

4. Retweet Can’t figure out what to say? The lazy approach is to simply repeat — rather, retweet — interesting messages. Find one, copy the message, and send it to your followers with a reference to the original author. (Do this by typing RT and then the @ symbol followed directly by the person’s username.) The author will often pay you back with a reply. And your retweet might just get retweeted — which is confusing, but good.

We became tweeters in late 2008, whilst on the hunt for internal communication apps that would be more efficient than e-mail and quicker than the phone when sending generic company messages.  We signed to Yammer and Twitter.  Not realising at the time that Twitter was about asymetrical external comms more than anyting internal. Doh!

After 8 months or so of presence, and a waning interest in tweeting, we’ve decided to freeze our interactions as status updates through our facebook fan page seem to generate a greater response and the copy, photos and event parameters suit our communication needs better.  To become a fan on our facebook fan page, got to http://www.facebook.com/pages/MASH/126247021017?ref=ts

Original article written by inc.com

What were you doing when you were 14?

December 1st, 2009   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Suhas Gopinath - (born November 4, 1986) is an Indian entrepreneur. He is the founder, CEO, and Chairman of Globals Inc, an IT multinational company.

Biography

Suhas Gopinath was born in Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. At the age of 12, he launched a web site called CoolHindustan.com[1] but when the logo was hacked to display “CoolPakistan”, Mr. Gopinath reportedly abandoned it.[2]

When an American company invited him to their headquarters so he could maintain their web site, he is said to have declined on the ground that he wanted to be an entrepreneur.[3] However in 2000, at the age of 14 Mr. Gopinath traveled to the United States to found Globals Inc. in San Jose, California, as the laws in India did not allow a minor to set up a company.

He was recognized by several media outlets as The World’s Youngest CEO for” for being the youngest ever in the world to have incorporated a company[4][5] In 2003 Globals Inc. lost a business deal with a Singaporean e-Commerce company reportedly because the then 17-year-old CEO was too young to sign a memorandum of understanding.[6]. As of 2007, Globals have served more than 200 clients worldwide through presence in 11 countries.[7]

In 2005, Mr Gopinath was the youngest among the 175 recipients of the Karnataka state’s Rajyotsava Award.[8] Mr. Gopinath is also a brand ambassador for PETA.[9]
On December 2, 2007, The European Parliament and International Association for Human Values conferred a “Young Achiever Award” on Mr. Gopinath at the European Parliament, Brussels. He was invited to address the European Parliament and businessmen assembled in that parliament.[10]

Mr. Gopinath was announced as a “Young Global Leader” for 2008-2009 by the World Economic Forum, Davos. In that position he would be involved in development programs across the world. He holds a Diploma on Global Leadership and Public Policy from the Harvard Kennedy School at the Harvard University. He is reported to be the youngest YGL in the World Economic Forum’s history. This year’s Young Global Leaders includes Suhas Gopinath along with Hollywood Actor Leonardo DiCaprio, Musician A. R. Rahman, American Vice President runner and Louisiana State Governor Bobby Jindal, Hotmail.com Founder Sabeer Bhatia[11].

Suhas Gopinath was invited by the World Bank in November 2008 by the World Bank President Robert Zoellick to represent the World Bank’s ICT Advisory Board for adopting ICT in Nigeria and Kenya for increasing employ-ability and fostering ICT skills in students from these countries.[12].

In June 2009, Suhas Gopinath bagged the Make a Difference Award conferred on him by the Incredible Europe at Vienna, Austria.[13].

In October 2009, Suhas Gopinath bagged the SIP Fellow Award at the Global Social Innovators Forum 2009 at Singapore.[14].

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It’s that time of year again!

November 24th, 2009   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

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It’s our annual partner party on the 9th December, a time for us to celebrate with our fellow Mashers and Clients as yet another year draws to a close.

To pop your name on the list, join our facebook fan page http://www.facebook.com/pages/MASH/126247021017?ref=nf and add your name to the party.  Alternatively, e-mail gregm@mashmarketing.co.uk and I’ll make sure we save you a place.

The Earth needs our Help!

November 23rd, 2009   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Our two co-founders are active members of an organisaton called EO (entrepreneurs organisation – www.eonetwork.org) and often come back to the office with stories of brilliance from commercial and social entrepreneurs from across the globe.  On Tuesday, they went to an EO24 Event to listen to a brilliant entrepreneur called Bill Liao, founder of Xing.com.  Bill is a serial entrepreneur, having taken part in 7 IPO’s in his career and works predominately in philanthropy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_liao).

Bill’s is currently involved in a building a new organization with resources and partners to reforest 20 Million Square Kilometers of our precious Earth.  To read more about his amazing new business, and to actively participate in helping change the World, visit his website on www.weforest.com and become a fan on facebook. http://www.facebook.com/WeForest?ref=ts

We want to help Bill achieve his goal, and hope that you’ll sign up too.  We can all make a difference.


Jenson Button to race around Bluewater for Virgin Media Event

October 20th, 2009   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

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The newly crowned F1 Word Champion Jenson Button will race around Bluewater’s road network today (20 October) as part of Virgin Media’s SpeedWeek50 experiential campaign.

Brand experience agency iblinkworld has been brought in to activate the seven-day event, which kicked off at the Kent shopping centre on 14 October.

For the past six days shoppers have been able to take part in a variety of F1 themed activities while road testing Virgin Media’s latest products. The event culminates today with Button racing around a bespoke high-speed circuit in a super-charged Mercedes SL AMG.

Designated viewing areas have been set up around the track as well as a specially-created paddock area, complete with Brawn GP replica car, Formula 1 simulator, Winnebagos, a Mercedes showcase and a ‘speedy car wash’ area. Button won the title of World Champion after coming fifth in the Brazilian Grand Prix this weekend.

MASH are working in partnership with iBlink to provide all of the on site talent, pit lane girls, models and event managers for the event.

Symptoms of swine flu

August 5th, 2009   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

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It is important that as swine flu spreads, you know the symptoms of the disease so you can recognise it in yourself and others at an early stage.  Please read this page and consider your symptoms carefully before using the National Pandemic Flu Service mentioned below.  So far, most swine flu cases have been mild, with symptoms similar to those of seasonal flu. Only a small number of people have had more serious symptoms.  If you or a member of your family has any of the following symptoms and a temperature of 38°C or above, you may have swine flu.

The typical symptoms are:

  • a sudden fever (a high body temperature of 38°C/100.4°F or above), and
  • a sudden cough.

Other symptoms may include:

  • headache,
  • tiredness,
  • chills,
  • aching muscles,
  • limb or joint pain,
  • diarrhoea or stomach upset,
  • sore throat,
  • runny nose,
  • sneezing, or
  • loss of appetite.

Checking symptoms
It makes sense to have a working thermometer at home, as an increase in temperature is one of the main symptoms. If you are unsure how to use a thermometer, go to How to take someone’s temperature.  If you are still concerned you may have swine flu, stay at home and check your symptoms using the online National Pandemic Flu Service.  Call your GP directly if:

  • you have a serious existing illness that weakens your immune system, such as cancer,
  • you are pregnant,
  • you have a sick child under one,
  • your condition suddenly gets much worse, or
  • your condition is still getting worse after seven days (five for a child).

Note: the National Pandemic Flu Service is a new online service that will assess your symptoms and, if needed, provide an authorisation number that can be used to collect antiviral medication from a local collection point. For those who do not have internet access, the same service can be accessed by telephone on:

Telephone: 0800 151 3100
Minicom: 0800 151 3200
For more information on the National Pandemic Flu Service go to Flu service: Q&A.

High-risk groups

For most people, swine flu is a mild illness. Some people get better by staying in bed, drinking plenty of water and taking over-the-counter flu medication.  However, some groups of people are more at risk of serious illness if they catch swine flu, and will need to start taking antiviral medication as it is confirmed that they have it.  It is already known that you are particularly at risk if you have:

  • chronic (long-term) lung disease,
  • chronic heart disease,
  • chronic kidney disease,
  • chronic liver disease,
  • chronic neurological disease (neurological disorders include motor neurone disease, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease),
  • immunosuppression (whether caused by disease or treatment) or
  • diabetes mellitus.

Also at risk are:

patients who have had drug treatment for asthma within the past three years, pregnant women, people aged 65 and older, and young children under five.  It is vital that people in these higher-risk groups who catch swine flu get antivirals and start taking them as soon as possible.

Outlook

For most people, the illness appears to be mild. Cases have been confirmed in all age groups, but children and younger people seem much more likely to be affected. To date, fewer cases have been confirmed in older adults.
For a minority of people, the virus has caused severe illness. In many of these cases, other factors have been identified that are likely to have contributed to the severity of the illness.   Worldwide, just over 0.4% of the laboratory-confirmed cases reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) have died. This is a similar rate to ordinary flu. The true number of swine flu cases is likely to be significantly higher than that reported to WHO and therefore the figure of 0.4% is likely to be an overestimate of the death rate.
Where complications do occur, they tend to be caused by the virus affecting the lungs. Infections such as pneumonia can develop.