Privacy Policy
Talent Matrix Staffing IT Staffing Services Policy And Standard Agreement This Policy defines Talent Matrix Staffing’s service models, roles and responsibilities, legal and compliance requirements, commercial terms, classification rules, quality and security expectations, and internal controls for providing IT staffing services in the United States. It is intended for use as both an internal operating standard and the basis for client-facing Master Service Agreements (MSAs), Statements of Work (SOWs), and staffing orders.
1. Scope and Service Models
1.1 Services Provided
- Temporary/Contract IT Staff (hourly).
- Contract-to-hire placements.
- Direct (permanent) placement / direct hire.
- Statement-of-Work (SOW) project engagements where agreed in writing.
- Roles: software developers, QA engineers, DevOps, DBAs, support engineers, systems engineers, architects, IT project/program managers, business analysts, cloud engineers, security engineers.
- Experience levels: Junior (entry), Mid (competent/independent), Senior (lead/architect).
- Work locations: onsite at client facilities, remote (U.S.-based), or hybrid as agreed.
- Off-shore work: prohibited unless expressly approved in writing and compliant with applicable law and visa/immigration rules.Out-of-state placements must comply with state wage, tax, and registration requirements.
2. Roles, Responsibilities, and Employment Status
2.1 Talent Matrix Responsibilities
- Recruit, hire, onboard, and pay assigned workers.
- Withhold and remit payroll taxes; provide workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance.
- Maintain personnel and payroll records and administer agreed benefits.
- Conduct background checks, credential verification, and required pre-employment screening where lawful and as agreed with the client.
- Provide day-to-day supervision, assign tasks, set priorities and schedules, and evaluate performance.
- Provide a safe workplace in compliance with OSHA and site-specific safety rules.
- Approve time worked and expenses in accordance with the agreed timekeeping processes.
- Ensure client-provided systems, tools, or information used by assigned workers are secure and compliant with client policies.
- Assigned workers provided under contract or temp engagements are employees of Talent Matrix (unless expressly documented and approved as independent contractors after a formal classification process).
- Assigned workers have no authority to bind the client or Talent Matrix contractually.
- Talent Matrix retains ultimate responsibility for employment, pay, and employment-related legal compliance for its employees.
3. Legal and Compliance Requirements
3.1 General Compliance
- Talent Matrix will comply with all applicable federal, state, and local employment, tax, labor, immigration, safety, and anti-discrimination laws.
- Pay at least applicable federal/state/local minimum wage.
- Non-exempt workers receive overtime pay at the legal rate (typically 1.5× regular rate for hours over 40 in a workweek) and all compensable hours are recorded.
- Prohibit and remediate “off-the-clock” work.
- Comply with Title VII, ADA, ADEA, and other federal/state anti-discrimination laws.
- Prohibit discriminatory client requests; investigate and address complaints promptly.
- Talent Matrix and the client will coordinate to ensure a safe workplace. Talent Matrix will inquire into client worksite hazards prior to placement and ensure employees receive required safety training.
- Workers will be classified using an economic realities/common law analysis focused on economic dependence; a documented checklist will be maintained before engaging any worker as an independent contractor.
- Talent Matrix reserves the right to reclassify and correct status if required by law.
- Talent Matrix will complete and retain Form I-9 for all hires and comply with IRCA; no worker will begin work without valid verification.
- Talent Matrix will specify which benefits are offered (health insurance eligibility, PTO, statutory leaves). FMLA eligibility will be tracked and administered per law.
- If Talent Matrix qualifies as an ALE under the ACA, applicable tracking and offers will be implemented.
- Client and Talent Matrix acknowledge potential joint employer exposure and will cooperate on compliance (e.g., time approvals, training, safety). Client must comply with obligations set out in the staffing order/MSA.
4. Commercial Terms: Rates, Billing, Payment
4.1 Bill Rates and Overtime
- Bill rates are set per role and level in the staffing order. Overtime is billed at agreed premium (default 1.5×) consistent with law and client pre-approval requirements.
- Invoicing frequency: weekly or Bi-Weekly unless otherwise agreed.
- Timekeeping: electronic timesheets/portal; client approval process and timelines will be specified.
- Standard payment terms: Net 30 (or as contractually agreed).
- Talent Matrix may adjust bill rates to reflect statutory changes in payroll taxes, mandatory benefits, or legally required wage increases upon notice to the client.
- Reimbursable travel and business expenses require prior client approval and will be billed per receipts and agreed expense policy.
5. Contract-to-Hire and Direct Hire Conversion 5.1 Temp-to-Perm Conversion
- Standard conversion period: when assigned worker has worked a minimum threshold (default 520 hours / ~13 weeks) for the client through Talent Matrix, conversion fees are reduced or waived as contractually agreed.
- If the client hires the worker before the minimum threshold, a conversion fee applies (default: 20% of the worker’s projected first-year base salary or a negotiated flat buyout fee), payable within the invoiced period.
- Conversion fees apply if the client hires the worker directly or through a third party within a look-back period (default: 6–12 months from last assignment).
- Client agrees not to circumvent Talent Matrix by hiring workers introduced by Talent Matrix without paying applicable fees.
6. Service Quality, Replacement, and Guarantees
6.1 Screening and Vetting
- Talent Matrix will perform CV screening, technical interviews, reference checks, and lawful background or credential checks as agreed with the client.
- Unless otherwise agreed, a short evaluation period (default: first 2 workdays) applies; if the client retains the worker beyond the evaluation period, time is billable.
- Talent Matrix offers a replacement window (default: 7–14 calendar days) if the worker is terminated for cause or resigns, subject to placement limits and provided the client has complied with payment and scope terms.
7. Confidentiality, Intellectual Property, and Data Security
7.1 Confidentiality
- All Talent Matrix employees assigned to a client must sign confidentiality/non-disclosure agreements that bind them to protect client confidential information. NDAs will be flowed down in worker agreements.
- Work product produced by assigned workers for the client will be treated as “work made for hire” where permitted; Talent Matrix will assign all rights to the client upon full payment, subject to third-party license constraints.
- Assigned workers must follow client security policies, use secure access methods, and report incidents promptly. Talent Matrix will require adherence to client-required background checks, security trainings, and confidentiality protocols for remote work.
8. Term, Termination, Indemnity, and Liability 8.1 Term
- Standard MSA term will be specified in the agreement (example: one year) with automatic renewal unless terminated by written notice within the contractually defined notice period.
- For convenience: either party may terminate with agreed notice (example: 30 days) subject to payment for hours worked and expenses.
- For cause: immediate termination is permitted for material breach, non-payment, legal violations, or where required by law.
- Mutual indemnities: Talent Matrix indemnifies for employment-related claims arising from Talent Matrix’s acts; client indemnifies for claims arising from client direction, client’s products/services, or worksite conditions. Specific indemnity wording will appear in the MSA.
- Exclude indirect, incidental, consequential, punitive damages to the fullest extent permitted by law. Cap on direct liability generally limited to fees paid under the agreement in the preceding 12 months, subject to minimums where required by law.
9. Internal Controls, Policies, and Documentation
9.1 Compliance Program
- Maintain written procedures for wage/hour compliance, anti-discrimination, safety, I-9/IRCA processes, and classification reviews. Conduct periodic internal audits.
- Use a client/vendor onboarding checklist to review site safety, job descriptions, pay rates, classification risk, insurance, and security requirements before accepting assignments.
- Maintain standard, legally reviewed templates for MSA, staffing orders, SOWs, timekeeping forms, conversion notices, and amendments. Legal counsel must approve material changes.
- Retain payroll, timekeeping, I-9s, tax records, and other mandated records for statutory retention periods.
10. FLSA-Specific Policy Clauses (Insertable into Client Agreement or Employee Handbook)
10.1 Classification and Exemption Evaluations
- Talent Matrix will evaluate each role for exempt/non-exempt status using FLSA duties and salary-basis tests, including careful analysis of “computer employee,” administrative, and professional exemptions. Most IT support roles will be treated as non-exempt unless they meet strict exemption criteria.
- All compensable time must be captured via approved timekeeping. Remote logins, mandatory after-hours maintenance, training, and on-call time that qualifies as work will be paid. Off-the-clock work is prohibited.
- The regular rate will be calculated consistent with FLSA rules when multiple pay components exist; overtime paid accordingly.
11. Worker Classification Process (Policy Appendix)
- Use the economic realities/common law checklist covering: opportunity for profit/loss, investment, permanency, degree of control, integral nature of work, and skill/initiative.
- Require documented approvals before engaging independent contractors and periodic reviews where assignments, supervision, or duration change.
12. Practical Operational Rules (Examples)
- Timesheet approval: client must approve weekly timesheets in the portal within 5 business days; contested hours will be investigated jointly.
- Rate change notice: Talent Matrix will give 30 days’ notice for statutory cost pass-throughs.
- Safety incident reporting: Workers must report injuries to client and Talent Matrix within 24 hours.
13. Policy Exceptions and Amendments
- Any deviation from this Policy requires written approval by Talent Matrix legal and operations leadership and must be memorialized in the MSA or staffing order.
- Talent Matrix will review and update this Policy periodically to reflect legal changes and industry best practices.
14. Governing Law and Dispute Resolution
- Governing law, venue, and dispute resolution (arbitration/mediation/court) will be set forth in the MSA and tailored by state law and client negotiation.
- Implementation Options:
- Client-facing Staffing Services Agreement: Insert core clauses from Sections 1–8 and FLSA language (Section 10) into your MSA and staffing orders.
- Internal Policy / ISO: Use the full document with appendices (classification checklist, onboarding checklist, audit schedule, templates).
- Customization: Talent Matrix should adapt conversion fees, evaluation periods, termination notice, and liability caps to its commercial strategy and counsel advice.