Guidance for BSL interpreters supporting people on finance courses
You can see some selected slides from this session here:
Selected ‘Finance for Freelancers’ slides >
During sessions I sometimes vary the order of the slides as I go along according to needs, but there shouldn’t be anything too different from these.
The terminology I will be explaining includes:
- freelance – a very broad term that means someone working in non-permanent work over time. It can include people who are paid PAYE (pay as you earn; ‘employed’ to the tax office), people who are registered as a sole trader (which means ‘self-employed’ to the tax office), and people who work through their own limited company
- sole trader – a type of one-person business; the person is the business
- limited company – a type of business where the company is the business but the person is not
- turnover – business income; what you invoice for
- business-related, tax-deductible expenses – costs that businesses have (including sole trader businesses) that can be recorded to reduce your tax bill
- profit – turnover minus business-related expenses; this is what businesses in the UK are normally taxed on.
- RTI – Real Time Information – a system where employers tell the tax office about salaries paid to employees on the day or before the day the employee is paid.
- help sheets – my support on specific topics accessible via my site
- templates – ditto – spreadsheets and invoice templates which people can download and use
- cloud-accounting software – HMRC authorised software to keep business records (e.g. QuickBooks, FreeAgent, etc.
We often have breakout room sessions, so I will make sure you and anyone you are supporting are in a room together.
We also use mentimeter.com to run polling and fun quizzes on things like tax. I will be explaining how this works to everyone on the day. It’s pretty straightforward.
I am always very comfortable being interrupted during the session if there’s anything that needs clarifying. That will certainly happen a number of times as the terminology and concepts will be new to all.
NB: David Thomas Media Ltd is not responsible for the content of other sites nor any financial advice provided by them.
