Category: Freelancers

17 Apr

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Gorgeous new designs for freelancer websites

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Hi Freelancers,

We’re very excited about our latest step in turning DoNanza into the Freelancer’s home in the cloud. Here’s what we’ve been up to:


New Freelancer Pages

We hired some of the best design talent on the web (For freelancers – by freelancers!) and came up with beautiful templates and themes. A smart editor lets freelancers add content from existing web-services, social networks and online marketplaces. Adding an impressive portfolio is easy as uploading a photo to Facebook or instagram. We believe we came up with an agile and sexy “no brainer” solution that will help freelancers promote their business online easily, without distractions, letting them focus on their work and freeing up their time. We will continuously be rolling out gorgeous new templates and themes that focus on different, specific strengths and expertise. The Freelancer page service, like always, is 100% free for all users.

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15 Apr

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The easy way to establish your expertise using Quora

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While big brands have long sought to be recognized as thought leaders in particular business areas, it’s now just as important for your own personal brand. Quora provides the platform for you to show your expertise across multiple subject areas and get you noticed, not just by your CV, but by the quality of your writing and knowledge.

In this article, I’ll look at how Quora can help you to find the right opportunities and have the right opportunities find you.

What is Quora?

Quora is a real-time questions and answers service. Launched in June 2009, it soon found a core audience in the Silicon Valley tech industry. This proved pivotal in driving uptake, as questions, especially from journalists, were getting answered by the people uniquely positioned to answer them. It has managed to stay relevant and authoritative as it has grown, blossoming into a vibrant and energetic community.

Quora: there are questions on a variety of topics, here it’s ‘How to get started as a freelancer’.

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06 Apr

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Questions each freelancer should ask a potential client

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Freelancers face numerous potential problems when dealing with clients. A quick Internet search reveals horror stories of non-paying clients, personality conflicts and unreasonable demands. Forward-thinking freelancers can gauge the worthiness of potential projects and clients by asking the following critical questions in advance of signing an agreement.

Image by svilen001 on Stock.xchng

Long-Term Vision

  • What are your long-term goals? Knowing the long-term direction can help freelancers develop strategies and tactics that can be built upon to continue advancing a business toward its goals.
  • How do you see contract talent as a part of your long-term vision? This helps you set your expectations — and your calendar. You will be able to determine whether this has the potential to be a long-term project for your or if you will be seeking new work within the next few months.

Working with Freelancers

  • Have you worked with freelancers in the past? What was your experience? Companies that have never worked with freelancers and those with a negative prior experience often require that you spend more time and energy in building trust.
  • Have you ever completed projects of this scale in the past? If this is a client’s first go at an e-book, a social media marketing campaign or blog, you may need to anticipate some additional consulting hours to help your client understand the process. Continue Reading
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05 Apr

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Being a freelancer or being a professional freelancer

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For the hobbyist freelancer, scoring an occasional project or assignment may be merely a way to make some extra cash. You may be helping a friend or business acquaintance out with a fresh website design or taking photos of your cousin’s kids just for a little extra spending money, or to keep your skill set fresh. But for the freelancer who is building his career one project at a time, each and every assignment is an opportunity to build a portfolio, gain networks and experience, and earn a living.

According to the Freelancers Union, nearly 30 percent of America’s workforce is now considered independent workers. Some are just working for pleasure while others are striving to build a lasting career. The two groups seem similar enough but there are a few core differentiators: Continue Reading

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01 Apr

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Effective Networking for Freelancers

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Effective networking is an excellent way to improve the quality and quantity of your freelance projects, but it can also be a great way to meet other freelancers and build a support network to ensure your freelance career continues to be a success.

The Secret to Successful Networking

The secret to effective networking is to listen.

Networking is your opportunity to learn more about the people in your sphere, either online or offline. Pay attention to what the person you’re talking to is saying and then offer suggestions — if you have something worth saying. The most successful networkers rarely talk about themselves. Instead of Continue Reading

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28 Mar

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Why Freelance Marketing is Important and How to Do It Right

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Failure to market at the right time is one of the biggest mistakes a freelancer can make. When you’re busy, it seems there’s very little need to promote your services, but that’s just the time when you should do it if you want to make sure you have no slow periods. Market when you’re busy and you will be able to take your pick of interesting projects. That won’t happen if you wait until you are desperate for any job. Marketing is a year-round activity, but that doesn’t mean it has to be hard work. There are two ways to market – actively and passively – and a combination of both will get you the best results.

[Caption: good marketing combines having your skills on display and actively promoting them]

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26 Mar

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What I learned from starting out as a freelancer

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Making the decision to leave corporate America and take a chance on owning my own freelance business did not come lightly, especially in this economy. It was just days before I gave my notice when I saw a Facebook status shuffle that gave me the boost I needed. It read, “You have to make the choice to take the chance in order for your life to change.”

In the last few years, I’ve had ups and downs, but I’ve been fortunate enough to have more ups than downs. I’ve gained some great clients and lost a few. I’ve had some not-so-good clients that made work unbearable at times. I’ve had to learn my craft on my own, through books, independent courses and the help of some great peers in the industry. But through it all, I’ve learned some great lessons on how to be a great freelancer and a better person. Continue Reading

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21 Mar

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How to Create a Stunning Freelance Portfolio with Pinterest

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Freelancers who are using Pinterest just for fun may be missing a trick. The site delivers eye-candy in a number of categories — and some of that eye-candy can be your own work. Pinterest reimagines the corkboard, making it easy to make collections (called “boards”) of the things you love by pinning, and to share and comment on pins and collections in a social environment.

How is this useful for freelancers? Continue Reading

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12 Mar

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5 Tips to Build Your Freelance Brand

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Image: Naypong / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

 

Now that you’ve made the decision to become a professional freelancer, you’re going to need to get your name out to prospective clients so that they’ll know you’re open for business and start hiring you.

There are many ways to do this, but here are five simple ways you can increase awareness about you and your services.

Improve Your Website

Your website is your online resume and often an important demonstration of your skills. If you’re a web designer with a boring (or dated) website, it’s unlikely anyone will hire you based on what they see. If you’re a writer, grammatical and spelling errors on your website will lose you clients. If you’re an SEO consultant, but they can’t find you through Google – well, you get the point.

Regardless of your area of expertise, you need to have a website. This will help prospective clients find you, whether they’re just googling experts in your field or doing background research before they hire you. There are many free ways to do this, but if you don’t invest in your business, why should your clients?

Leverage Local Media

Many local media outlets – radio, television, and print – like to feature the efforts of local businesses. Provide them with a well-crafted press release to share who you are, what you’re doing, and why you’re the best option in town. Writing a press release isn’t rocket science, but it does take a bit of finesse to ensure it’s not seen as a purely marketing effort. Local media is looking for a story, not to run an ad for you for free. Provide them with something interesting and you might benefit from the free exposure. They may also want to contact you to weigh in on a story they’re doing on your area of expertise.

Even if your local media doesn’t pick up your story, you can submit it to one of the many free press release sites available on the internet. While it’s unlikely to expect these articles to become an actual news story, these free sites do provide useful linking to your website (you do have a website, right?) and will help increase your presence in search engine results.

Expand Your Social Media Presence

In the early days of your freelance career, you’re going to have much more time than money. Use your time effectively, and create profiles on all of the available social media spaces – if you’re going to be active on them. If you create a profile and never come back to that site, it’s not going to give you any benefit, so choose a platform where you expect to participate.

Social media is a great way to share value with your contacts, but it’s a good rule of thumb to listen at least twice as much as you talk. Pay attention to what’s going on within this channel. Retweet and share information you think is useful, but don’t be a spammer. If the only thing you’re talking about is you, just like in real life, you will find that that only people listening are just as spammy as you. And spambots aren’t going to hire you.

Be an Active Participant

There are conversations about your industry going on all the time. Find these conversations, and provide value to them. Find out where the experts in your field are spending their time online, and go there and listen. If you can provide a useful opinion, feel free to share it, but be careful. In many online forums, self-promotion can result in very unwanted feedback, or even worse, get you completely ignored. Forever. Whether in online forums or social media, if you become known as the expert, people will do business with you. (One quick hint, calling yourself an expert is a sure-fire way to ensure that nobody else does.)

Update Your Online Portfolio

If you can’t get a website up yet, you’ve still got options. Here on DoNanza, you can build a Branded Freelancer page, a space to share content from your portfolio, link to your social media accounts, link directly to your own website (if you’ve got one) and give you analytics to see who is visiting your profile. This web presence can be shared with your prospects, so they can get an idea about the quality of work you can provide. Share your DoNanza Branded Freelancer page with a wider audience to help you get bigger – and better paying – projects more often.

These are just a few of the tips you can use to start promoting your brand. We’d love to know what works for you. What are you doing to tell the world you’re available to help them?

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12 Mar

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Setting Your Freelance Rates

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Freelancing Isn’t Free

To make a living as a freelancer, you need to be paid for the work you do.  Setting your rates is an important but difficult decision for many creatives entering the market; you don’t want to undercharge but you don’t want to miss any opportunities because your rates are too high. Knowing what you need is the first step in determining what your rates should be.

When I made the decision to go full-time freelance, I looked at my expenses from the previous year to see how much I would need to maintain my lifestyle. Once I had an annual amount, I broke that down into a monthly and daily increments. This allows me to review my earning each day. If I didn’t hit my daily target, I know that tomorrow will need to be more productive.

Estimating Expenses and Hours

Many freelancers use the following basic formula as a starting point for setting rates:

(Annual expenses + savings) ÷ billable hours = expected minimum hourly rate

For example, if you need to cover $25,000 in expenses, want to save $5,000, and expect to bill 1,000 hours, your rate should be $30 per hour.

Here are some tips for estimating how your variables plug into this equation:

 

Annual Expenses:

Take a look at what you spent last year, but keep a close eye on your expenses on a weekly/monthly basis or else you’re likely to have a nasty surprise at the end of the year. Expect your expenses to change from your pre-freelance days, as there are some things you might not have to pay for now that you’re working from home, such as transportation, parking, lunch/coffee break treats, etc. But you’re probably going to pick up a few new expenses, like software, communications, office supplies (stealing from work is no longer an option…), motivational treats, gym memberships to burn off the motivational treats, etc.

Now that you’re self-employed, there’s no employer deducting the proper amount from each paycheck. True, being self-employed allows you to enjoy more tax savings through allowable write-offs, but for US and Canadian freelancers, expect to give at least a third of whatever you collect back to your government. Make sure to account for your taxes in your annual expenses. Depending on where you’re working, you might also have to collect taxes on the services you’re providing. The taxes I collect go straight to a specific bank account, and I don’t touch them until it’s time to remit them to the revenue agency.

Savings:

Choosing to become self-employed means losing some of the financial benefits general employees often take for granted, such as corporate pensions, medical insurance, sick days, and benefit plans. Whether it’s a 401(k) or another kind of retirement fund, it’s critical that you invest your profits so that you can enjoy something better than cat food during your retirement years. Build a specific amount into your formula to ensure you’re putting money aside every year, and then don’t touch it until after you retire. The higher your expenses, the more you should be allocating to your savings.

Billable Hours:

If you work 40 hours per week and take two weeks off per year, you’re looking at about 2,000 hours per year. Do not think you will be able to bill for every hour you work. It’s not going to happen. You’re going to invest time in emails, phone calls, meetings, prospecting, accounting, administration, and more. Your clients are hiring freelancers so that they don’t have to pay an employee 2-3 hours per day to hang out at the water cooler.

This is an opportunity for you to improve your accounting skills – track your time on a daily basis in terms of billable and non-billable hours. In your first year, or first few years, you’re going to probably spend much more time on the non-billable hours. As you progress in your freelance career this will probably change, but if you aren’t tracking it, you won’t really know. A reasonable range to target for your first few years might be 750-1,000 billable hours.

Adjusting your price

Since you’re running your own business, you can set your rates to whatever you like.  If you’re finding that you don’t have enough work, you might choose to drop your hourly rate a bit, and make up for the difference through additional billable hours. More work should be more pay, and you’re going to need to experiment a bit to find out what the market will bear. A good rule of thumb, if 30% of your clients aren’t questioning your price, you’re probably not charging enough.

Be realistic about your expenses, billable hours, and savings. These three factors can make the difference between a successful freelance career and one that involves too many ketchup sandwiches and ramen noodles. Once you know how much you need to make for each billable hour, you can start looking for projects that will pay you the rate you’re expecting.

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