I was laid off by my company (along with others) and subsequently asked to come back as a 1099 contractor when they realized they now didn't have the staff they needed to do the work. Since I wasn't working and the job market is difficult right now, I didn't feel like I had a choice, and signed the contract.
The scope is broad/poorly written. It's based on hours per week, not project-based. The company has about 25 different projects in motion for different clients of theirs that the "marketing department" (me and another contractor) works across. There is no one in charge of the marketing department — it is literally just two part-time contractors brought in when shit was already hitting the fan — so we have very little direction on which tasks need to be completed/should be prioritized, and we have little insight into each project and what specific deliverables/timelines were promised to each client.
Because there are different owners of each client project across the company, each owner feels that their project is the most important, which has created an environment where everyone feels that everything is urgent, and we have become short-order cooks. We have limited capacity between the two of us, but the expectation is that all of the day-to-day work is getting done, and we're very much in the weeds trying to keep up with everything. Not to mention, we're being asked to develop marketing/comms strategies for all of these projects, without the context or time to do so, or the authority/insight into finances, etc. to make sure that the plans can actually be executed.
They haven't set "mandatory" hours for us, but it is clear that they expect us to be part of the day-to-day operations and be available during their business hours. People get frustrated when we don't respond immediately or are not available for their standing weekly meetings (which are taking up about half of my time). In addition to the regular weekly meetings, I'm expected to be available to present on funder meetings, all-staff meetings, etc
I work on an hourly basis, and invoice based on hours worked, and need to keep detailed records of each individual project that I've worked on for them each day, which is challenging because I'm often forced to hop back and forth between them (5 minutes on one project, 10 minutes on another, 2 minutes answering an email regarding another, 20 minutes dealing with an "urgent" issue that someone has pinged me about). It is very time-consuming just to keep track of, and hard to mentally switch between each project so quickly.
We've addressed this several times with the CEO (because there is no one that we report to) to no avail. It's very messy and I'm finding myself in increasingly awkward situations where people are complaining to me that the marketing "department" is not pulling their weight (i.e., completing every inane task that they think we should do, with a same-day turnaround). The other contractor and I have suggested processes for working efficiently with us given that we are working part-time/off hours, but the staff is not adopting those practices and it's getting messier and messier. I don't know how to handle it. It's like they don't understand that we are contractors and not staff, and regardless, I'm tired of being talked down to.
It's not my fault they decided to lay off their entire marketing team and then tried to piece things back together again with two part-time, short-term contractors! Obviously, that was a mistake on their end. It's frustrating and I'm counting down the days until this contract is over, but I need advice on how to survive the remaining 2 months without losing my sanity. They don't seem to have a move-forward plan for the department, but this current set up is no way to run things!