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> Get Articles > Working At Home - Starting Out > So You Want To Be A Freelancer

So You Want To Be A Freelancer


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Elena Fawkner
janahbbo.com

A Home-Based Business Online
http://www.ahbbo.com


So You Want To Be A Freelancer



© 2002 Elena Fawkner



What's the difference between running your own home-based

business and freelancing? (tick, tick, tick ...) Give up? Me

too. If you want to work for yourself from home and have a

special talent or skill that you think others would be prepared

to pay for on an hourly or per-project basis, why not stop

thinking in terms of the traditional "home business" paradigm

and start thinking in terms of freelancing instead?



WHAT IS A FREELANCER?



Quite simply, a freelancer is an independent contractor who

earns his or her living by contracting for projects on a project

by project basis. A freelancer is not an employee of anyone

and so he or she must actively seek out work, negotiate the

terms and conditions of the project (the contract) and complete

the work to the satisfaction of the client. Once the project is

complete, the freelancer seeks out and enters into another

contract for another project.



Alternatively, the freelancer may have obligations under a

number of different contracts with different clients at the one

time.



Another variation involves the freelancer producing work and then

seeking buyers for that work. A freelance writer of magazine

articles, for example, would fall into this category.



WHO HIRES A FREELANCER?



Those who hire freelancers are as diverse as freelancers

themselves. In some cases, companies will hire freelancers

to complete a short-term project as an alternative to hiring

a new employee. This is often the case where the work in

question is spasmodic or ad hoc and the company cannot

justify hiring an employee for such work. Companies also

hire freelancers to help smooth out the peaks and troughs

in workload. Again, where there is a temporary oversupply

of work, the company will hire the freelancer on a short-term

basis to help cope with the backlog.



In other cases, companies hire freelancers for their special

expertise in a certain area. A company may want to create

a new website, for example. Hiring a freelance website

designer for such a project makes more sense than hiring

a website designer as an employee since once the website

is complete, the function will no longer be required.



Magazine and newspaper editors also hire freelancers or,

more precisely, buy rights to freelancers' work. A freelancer

in this type of situation may write a piece and submit it to

a number of different editors in the hope that his or her work

will be "picked up" by that editor and published, in return for

which the freelancer receives payment. By its nature, such

an approach is speculative since the freelancer can't be sure

that anyone will actually buy the work. Of course, once the

freelancer has been published, it is relatively easier to get the

editor to buy the freelancer's work in the future and, as the

freelancer's reputation grows, so too do the opportunities for

future business.



WHAT QUALIFICATIONS DOES A FREELANCER NEED?



To be financially successful, a freelancer obviously needs

marketable skills. A freelancer therefore needs the same

qualifications, skills and talents as someone who had been

hired as an employee to do the job would need. In other words,

if you are seeking work as a freelance website designer, you

must possess the same skills and qualifications that a full-time

employee website designer would possess.



IS A FREELANCER RUNNING A BUSINESS?



In short, yes. If you do not have an employer, if you have to

source your own work and negotiate your own terms, if you

have to chase payment, if you have to pay your own taxes

(i.e. no one is withholding them from your check), you are, in

essence, self-employed. Ergo, you are running your own

business.



There are a number of consequences you need to think about.

The first is taxation. You need to set aside from every payment

you receive an amount sufficient to cover your state and federal

taxes on the income you receive. Likewise, you need to keep

proper books and records so you can claim the deductions and

expenses to which you are entitled as a self-employed person.



As a freelancer, like any independent contractor, you will also

be expected to provide your own equipment and supplies. If

you are a website designer, you need to have your own computer,

software and other tools of the trade. The party hiring you will

not provide this stuff for you. Similarly, if you are a freelance

editor, you will be expected to have all the reference materials

and style books, word processing programs and other sundry

items any editor would need to do the job.



From a legal point of view, you should also give some thought

to the legal entity of your business. Will you be a sole

proprietor or will you incorporate? If you incorporate, will you

choose S-corporation status? There are important tax

consequences of each of these alternatives so be sure to get

advice from your accountant before starting and then talk

to your lawyer about incorporation.



Think also about what licenses you may need as well as

insurance (health, life and liability depending on the nature

of the work).



WHERE DOES A FREELANCER FIND WORK?



OK, onto the nitty gritty. You've decided to start work as a

freelance website designer. You have the appropriate

qualifications, training, experience and equipment and you've

consulted your accountant to determine the most tax-effective

business structure and your lawyer to set up your new company

and advise you in relation to issues such as business licenses

and fictitious business names. You're ready to hang out your

shingle. Now what?



= Approach Your Warm Market



Start with who you know. Where did you get your website

design experience? If it was with an employer, consider

whether that employer may not be a source of business for

you. That will obviously depend on the circumstances under

which you parted company but if you left on good terms and

didn't burn any bridges on your way out, by all means contact

your former employer and let him or her know that you are now

in business for yourself and ready, willing and able to take on

new projects. If possible, get a reference or testimonial too.

That will come in handy when it comes to touting for new

business from strangers.



Next, turn to your network of business associates you developed

while working for your former employer. Note, we're NOT talking

about clients of your former employer, rather your own network

of colleagues. Contact them and let them know about your

new venture and your availability for project work.



Be extremely cautious about approaching clients of your former

employer if your current business puts you in even indirect

competition with that employer. In fact you may be contractually

constrained from approaching former clients if you signed a non-

compete covenant in your employment contract, for example.



= Create Brochure/Resume



Go to the time and expense at this stage to prepare some

sort of resume of your experience and services. Get this

professionally printed as a brochure and send it, together with

your business card, to your former employer and colleagues

as a follow-up to your conversation. By giving them something

tangible about you, it is more likely that you will come to

mind when next they have a need for your services. If you've

already provided them with your brochure/resume, when the

time comes, the person concerned will think "hey, Joe's doing

this sort of thing now. Where's that information he sent? Oh,

here it is. I'll give him a call and see if it's something he

might be able to do for us."



= Approach Your Cold Market



Once you've approached your so-called "warm market", it's

time to start on the cold. Start by gathering up a list of

businesses in your local area or industry that you think would

have use of your services. Prepare a letter of introduction and

send it, together with your business card, to your list of

prospects. Your letter of introduction should make it very

clear why you are writing. Identify yourself and the specific

skills that may appeal to the reader and why.



Follow up in a week with a telephone call to make sure the

materials arrived safely. If the other person is approachable,

try and strike up a conversation about what you could do for the

business. Otherwise, thank the person for their time, ask them

to keep you in mind for future work and calendar to contact them

again in 30 days' time.



Continue to work your market like this. Remember, persistence

pays off. Don't be discouraged if you receive little warmth or

interest in response to your approaches to your cold market.

It takes time and persistence. Just don't take it personally.

A good way to approach it is to tackle a fixed number per day.

Start out by making a list of, say, 300 businesses you want

to approach. Develop your list from the Yellow Pages, local library

and the web to start with. Calendar to approach 10 businesses

a day for the next 30 days. That means ten calls a day, followed

by 10 letters of introduction (together with a copy of your

brochure/resume and business card) and a follow up phone

call a week later.



Where there is interest, you may be able to schedule a

meeting. Where there is no interest, schedule for a further

follow up call in 30 days. If there is still no interest, schedule for a

further call in 90 days. Or maybe you would prefer to do something

else to stay in contact. A good way is to publish a newsletter for

your clients and colleagues. Make it relevant to the recipient and

it's a good way of keeping your name in front of your prospects. A

quarterly newsletter is probably frequent enough. Send it, with

another of your business cards, to your list and, over time, you will

see that it will start paying off in the form of business.



= Samples



Another idea to think about is to produce a set of samples of your

work; a portfolio if you will. Make 8.5 x 11 copies of your work and

keep them in an artist's portfolio for presentations when you're

able to arrange face to face meetings with potential clients.



= Advertising and Promotion



Next comes advertising. If you're a website designer, possibly your

best advertisement is your own website. But don't stop there.

Advertise in the publications your target market reads.



Another good way to generate business is to join associations and

groups affiliated with your industry. Chambers of Commerce

are a good place to make handy contacts.



You will probably find that in the early stages of your freelance

career you spend more time marketing yourself and your

services than you spend actually working. There's a financial

cost to that, of course. How do you finance your marketing if

you don't have any money coming in? For this reason, the

early days will be lean and mean. Make sure you have the

financial wherewithall to survive this period.



HOW DOES A FREELANCER MAKE MONEY?



You will only make money as a freelancer if you charge more

that it costs you to do the work in terms of your time, expenses

and materials. Factor in a profit component to every job you quote

for and make sure that that profit component is in ADDITION to

an allowance for your time. For more on pricing your services,

see "Pricing Yourself To Get and Stay In Business", at

http://www.ahbbo.com/pricing.html .



Some freelancers charge by the hour and others by the project.

In reality, you will probably use a combination of both methods

depending on the nature of the job and the client.



You can get an idea of current market rates by surveying your

competitors. Don't be obvious about it though; competitors are,

naturally enough, reluctant to divulge information about their

businesses to their competitors. So you'll probably need to

employ a bit of subterfuge here by posing as a potential

customer, for example. In fact, it's in your legal interests

that your competition doesn't give you pricing information if it

knows you're a competitor. Such conduct can be construed

as price fixing which can land both of you in extremely hot

water. So, keep it safe and use circuitous methods of

obtaining pricing information from competitors.



PROTECTING YOURSELF



A question often asked by freelancers is "do I need a contract?".

Well, to start with, once you've negotiated a deal with a new

client you have a contract. The question is whether it's oral or

in writing. An oral contact is just as enforceable as a written one

but the problem becomes one of proof. How do you prove the

terms of your contract if all you have is one person's word against

another's? For this reason, a written contract is always a good

idea. It needn't be anything too elaborate. In fact, even an

exchange of letters will do. Just be sure to include the basic

terms:



= Describe the job



What must you do to perform the contract? Be as specific as

possible here and try not to be open-ended. "Create a website

for client" is too vague. What would you do if the client came back

after you'd finished and said, "but there's no shopping cart, there's

no feedback form?" and you hadn't quoted your time for these

things in striking the price? Better to say, "Create website

at client's direction consisting of (a) home page; (b) products and

services page; (c) order page; (d) shopping cart and (e) feedback

form". By requiring the client to be very specific about what it is

they want from their website, how they want it to look etc. you

can go a long way to avoiding misunderstandings caused by

vagueness.



= Set the price



State in unequivocal terms the price you are to receive for the

job. This can be either a project cost such as $5,000 or an

hourly rate such as "$150 hour or part thereof; minimum of

ten (10) hours" or whatever.



= State time for performance



Performance means not only when you will complete your part

of the bargain (i.e. delivering the completed website to the client)

but when the client must complete his or hers (i.e. by paying you).

FROM THE COAL FACE



Here's what real-life freelancers have to say about the freelance

life ...



= Once you leave the workforce and start freelancing, it can

be very difficult to get back in and the older you are the harder

it is. Once you've been out of corporate life for any length of

time, the more likely it is that employers, rightly or wrongly,

will see you as not "corporate" enough to fit back into the

traditional 9 to 5 routine.



= Isolation and loneliness. No surprise there. It's the same

bugaboo that anyone working alone from home must face.

For ways of overcoming the isolation monster, see

"Overcoming Isolation In Your Home Business" at

http://www.ahbbo.com/Overcoming_Isolation.html .



= Procrastination. Again, a common problem for many who

work from home without a boss to crack the whip. For ways

of overcoming procrastination, see "Overcoming Procrastination

In Your Home Business" at

http://www.ahbbo.com/Overcoming_Procrastination.html .



= Hard times with no checks in sight.



= Pay is usually better. A very good freelancer can generally

do much better than the average employee doing the same work

but it takes time to develop a reputation that people are prepared

to pay a premium for.



= You have to chase payment. Not everyone is going to pay you

merely because you tender your invoice so be prepared to have to

spend precious time chasing payment from slow payers. For

more on getting paid see "Getting Paid ... Minimizing Bad Debts

In Your Home Business". It's at

http://www.ahbbo.com/gettingpaid.html .



= If you don't like cold-calling, selling and marketing yourself,

freelancing is not for you. A good proportion of your time will

be spent doing exactly that.



When you think of all the things the freelancer must do to generate

business and income, it quickly becomes apparent that freelancing

is really just another term for working for oneself. It brings with

it the same challenges and opportunities as any home business

and really doesn't introduce anything new to the mix. Hopefully,

though, this article may have got you thinking about YOUR skills

and talents and how they could form the basis of a home business

of your own. For all you know, you may not need to go out and find

widgets to sell to start your own business. Start with what's already

in your own head and everything else will surely follow.



------



** Reprinting of this article is welcome! **

This article may be freely reproduced provided that: (1) you

include the following resource box; and (2) you only mail to

a 100% opt-in list.



Here's the resource box to use if reprinting this article:



------



Elena Fawkner is editor of A Home-Based Business Online ...

practical business ideas, opportunities and solutions for the

work-from-home entrepreneur.

http://www.ahbbo.com





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