Successful Freelancer
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You have just got over the most difficult obstacle of making a decision to unleash your true potential and enjoy freedom by choosing to freelance. It is the most authentic, safest way of making money online and statistically speaking, the future is full of freelancers as almost every 1 out of 3 individuals would be self-employed.

To become a successful freelancer, you have to go through the master’s manual of pushing the best foot forward and building a solid base in order to ace the competition. Your competition is tough, extremely sharp and could well be ahead of the curve already.

For doing successful freelancing, I would recommend paying heed to these 8 actionable tips and give them a try. They’ve worked for me, could well change your life.


1- Focus on learning a skill and becoming a master.


It is the survival of the fittest. For an average skill with mediocre expertise, the chances of long-lasting presence on any freelance marketplace are dim. In my two decades of a freelancing career, I have not seen someone who is a master of a particular skill and still failing.

In a saturated competition, if you can polish one skill and become the best, you have a great chance of becoming successful. More you polish your skill, learn every nitty-gritty detail about it, better the chances of you winning new projects and making money.


2- Focus on your profile.


Freelancers focus on bidding and push hard to convince the client to talk to them. In my opinion, the importance of a good profile cannot be ignored and should be addressed before bidding on the projects.

Your freelance profile is your resume, if it is not presentable, the chances of you winning many projects are low. A good profile is a perfect combination of the following elements.

  • Good profile picture.
  • Your work description that highlights your skill.
  • Information about you, a brief intro about your academic background.
  • Portfolio, it is as important as a brick and mortar store with products on the rack. If there are no products for sale, there is no buyer.
  • Video, a YouTube link embedded in your profile. Appear in the video and introduce yourself for 1:30 minutes. I have observed, profiles with videos get more project leads and invitations. The video should be made in a proper light, with proper sound.

3- Focus on bid quality over quantity.


In the excitement to send out many proposals on different sites daily, sadly, you are not doing justice to your time. I have observed, quality bids, addressing the client’s project placement directly get a better chance of being noticed over a canned response.

A good freelancer focuses on the projects that match their expertise. They only place their bids on the projects If they feel comfortable in successfully completing it. Don’t send canned responses to every project, instead, filter the ones you have a feel for, place your bid smartly and address the client’s problem mentioned in the project placement.


4- Focus on addressing the client’s pain point. s


When you bid on a project, you should look for a pain point of the client. If they have posted a project, they need something. Figure out their need and explain what you can do to address that issue and how will you do it.

Your ‘HOW‘ weighs in a long way. If you can explain the action plan of addressing a problem and clearly identify the timeframe to get it done, your bid gets noticed. When placing bid focus on these 7 points.

  • Greetings.
  • Rewriting the project in your own words.
  • Introduce yourself and your expertise.
  • What can you do to address the problem?
  • Provide portfolio related to the project. Try avoiding stuffing your bid with your complete portfolio.
  • Give an offer, a free sample or a mockup helps clients in making a decision.
  • A call to action such as ‘looking forward to your response’


5- Focus on a value proposition.


One of the major mistakes freelancers from Asia make, they plead in their bids in order to get noticed. It does not help them a bit. If you beg for the work, the client would rather prefer moving to a freelancer who is confident about their work and has a clean proposal specifying the action plan. Focus on proving a value, you will be noticed.


6- Focus on sending a contract after you are awarded the work.


Freelancers make a mistake of jumping directly to the work without taking care of documentation. I believe, a contract is very instrumental in a sound, worry-free relationship with a client. The contract should clearly specify the do’s and don’t so there is no hidden cost or expectations from both parties. Good contracts typically identifies, project description, deliverables, timeframe, additional cost (if any), price of the project and a maintenance period.


7- Focus on convincing your client for ESCROW.


You do not want to do all the hard work only to find out that client rips you off in the end. If you want to avoid any last minute headache, ask your client to deposit money in ESCROW right after a project is awarded. This protects not only your interest as a freelancer but also protects the client interest as well. Once the money in escrow, both parties can go into dispute if things do not go along well at any point.


8- Focus on client retention.


Acquiring new client is hard, it’s an uphill task but retaining the existing one is easy. Freelancers ignore the importance of client retention. An existing client can pay you better in a long run because they have tested you with the first job. They know your commitment level, they understand you and feel comfortable in working with you over hiring someone new for their next job.



Also Read : Start small to go big: here are 35 profitable businesses you can start in India within Rs 10,000



Source: www.beingguru.com


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