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Calculator subscription renewal
It’s that time of the year and we are exploring Calculators out there for both experienced and inexperienced unpaid advisers.
We would be really interested in other welfs experiences and thoughts on calculators out there etc etc?
[ Edited: 10 Mar 2020 at 12:32 pm by shawn mach ]
Shawn the asterisks were not meant as an expletive (the absolute last thing on my mind!), it was meant as erstwhile anonymising the calculator we currently use!
But i can see now how they would have been seen as an expletive!
Apologies for my embarrassingly poor communication skills!
Cringes in a corner of West Dorset!
Ha .. no worries .. and certainly no need for apologies (in fact we prefer asteriks to expletives) .....
... it was more a concern that your asterisk key had got stuck or that you were taking a siesta while resting your head on your keyboard .....
Cheers .. Shawn
Hi Andy, in case you haven’t seen it, the HTC people have contacted local offices to say that some subsidy from the HTC grant can be claimed towards the cost of benefit calculators.
We recently compared QBC to a trial of the paid version of entitledto, and decided to stick with QBC, at least for the experienced advisers.
Ha .. no worries .. and certainly no need for apologies (in fact we prefer asteriks to expletives) .....
... it was more a concern that your asterisk key had got stuck or that you were taking a siesta while resting your head on your keyboard .....
Cheers .. Shawn
Phew!
I can now walk the bridleways of West Dorset after Siesta’s with an untroubled mind!
Hi Andy, in case you haven’t seen it, the HTC people have contacted local offices to say that some subsidy from the HTC grant can be claimed towards the cost of benefit calculators.
We recently compared QBC to a trial of the paid version of entitledto, and decided to stick with QBC, at least for the experienced advisers.
Hi Jon
No i didn’t thanks for that! Saw the bit on training subsidy for HTC workers though.
Thanks for for the feedback re QBC (asterisked version) and entitledto.
I’ve used QBC since I was a trainee. Always preferred it to the step-by-step approach in many of the other (paid and free) calculators.
Convenient when you already know which info is relevant and what you can ignore, but also good for learning since (I find) it’s easier to tweak parameters and see the impacts immediately.
That said, I know a lot of people find it a bit daunting, including more experienced advisers.
I’ve used QBC since I was a trainee. Always preferred it to the step-by-step approach in many of the other (paid and free) calculators.
Convenient when you already know which info is relevant and what you can ignore, but also good for learning since (I find) it’s easier to tweak parameters and see the impacts immediately.That said, I know a lot of people find it a bit daunting, including more experienced advisers.
Thanks for the above!