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15 ways to make freelancing/self-employment successful

Posted Jul 02 2009, 07:23 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from Trent Hamm at partner blog The Simple Dollar:

An acquaintance from my previous career wrote to me recently asking about the steps I took when I made the switch to working at home:

It's official: I'm ready to get out of here. I'm tired of working here and I have a lot of people lined up to hire me for home catering and cooking. I'm sure you did a bunch of planning before you made the leap. What exactly did you plan?

I know at least one other former co-worker who is contemplating a similar move into a freelancing gig, though his plans are decidedly less clear at this point.

What exactly did I do during that transition period? I started making a list and soon realized that there were several things I wish I had done. Before I knew it, the e-mail had ballooned into a guide that I thought might be useful to other people.

Here are 15 things I did (or wish I had done) during the months leading up to my transition to working for myself.

Learn to live on less. One of the biggest challenges of freelancing/self-employment is the uneven pay. Gone are the steady paychecks of a typical job. Gone is the idea that you'll make roughly the same amount next month that you will this month. In some months this year I've earned 25% of what I earned in other months, and I anticipate a single month later in the year when several projects come to fruition and I'll have by far the best month of the year.

If you allow your spending to match your income, you're not going to be able to survive during the lean months. Instead, you need to adapt to a consistently lower level of spending. Start looking now for fat to trim from your life. Every expenditure you have that's not necessary for your basic living standards should come under very careful scrutiny.

Many people balk at this, but the truth is this: Your first several months as an independent worker are going to be a real shock in a lot of ways. The last thing you need is a bunch of unnecessary expenditures. If things go well, you can always add some expenses back into your life -- but you may find, surprisingly, that you're quite happy without most of them.

Create a budget, both personal and business. As I've written before, I'm not a believer in the "one-budget-fits-all" approach. Trying to make your budget or spending match an example provided by someone else is doomed for failure because that example doesn't match your life.

I argue that the real value provided by a budget is that it reveals, loud and clear, how you actually spend your money and it can provide some clear pointers to where you need to make changes. Prepare a budget by keeping careful track of what you spend for a month -- make a giant list of every dime you spend -- then organize all of that spending into categories that make sense to you. When you have that in place, look not only at the total amount you spend (you're going to need an income level that on average exceeds that by at least a little), but also at the various categories. Are there areas that you can cut?

A similar exercise for business expenses is also useful, though it can be more difficult. Seek advice on the expenses that people typically have freelancing in your area of interest and use that for a basis.

Build up a big emergency fund. If you've followed the first two steps and made serious cuts in your spending, you've now got a nice surplus of money coming in each month. Don't be tempted to spend it. Instead, sock it away into a savings account. In fact, do it automatically. Instruct your bank to automatically transfer a healthy amount each week into a savings account.

If you've done your budget, you have a good idea of what your monthly expenses are. I recommend having at least six months' worth of living expenses in your emergency fund before making the leap. This will help you survive the lean months, particularly those early on in your freelancing experience.

Now make it bigger. People often go light on the emergency fund before they make the leap. They have a bit of cash saved up, but they've convinced themselves that they're ready -- they have plenty of clients and opportunities lined up.

Don't make that mistake.

The big problem is that freelancers and self-employed folks, especially early on, can have a tendency to count their chickens before they hatch. No deal, no matter how good it is, is a sure thing until contracts are signed and products are delivered. You might have 10 potential clients who talk big about what they want to do, but when push comes to shove, all of them could vanish -- and many of them will.

Be prepared for that. Don't leave yourself in a desperate situation if a conversation doesn't pan out. Cover your bases -- and the best way to do that is with a healthy emergency fund. Build it now, build it later, and keep it nice and fat.

Start reaching out to your audience and client base now. There is no better time than right now to start digging for opportunities, even if your leap is far into the future. Get out there and start seeking out the people you want to know and the people you want to sell to.

In a nutshell, this is market research. You need to find out if there are people who will buy what you do and figure out how to connect with them. Obviously, the Internet and social media (like Twitter and Facebook) are good places to start, but they're just a start. You should also go where people who might be potential clients -- or potential competition -- congregate.

Start finding the people now. Join message boards. Start Twittering. Start a blog. Pound the pavement in your community. Dig through freelancing boards and other job boards. If you're passionate about the field you're leaping into -- and you must be if you want freelancing to work -- you have plenty to talk about. Let the passion flow.

Eliminate as many regular bills as you can. Back on the money side of the coin, start whacking your regular bills, particularly any related to entertainment. Ditch Netflix. If you want to watch a movie, use Redbox or a similar service. Ditch your cable bill entirely. Use a digital converter box and Hulu to get your television fix. Sell your car. If you can use public transportation or ride a bike to work, do you really need one?

For the ones you can't eliminate, trim. Make your living quarters as energy efficient as you can, with programmable thermostats and the like. Cut your cellular plan. Do you really need that much data, those minutes, or that many text messages? If you decided to keep cable or satellite, whack some premium channels you don't watch.

The more monthly bills you can eliminate or reduce, the more room you have to breathe when you make the transition.

Write a business plan. Don't worry about being too formal when you do this. The purpose of a business plan is to make you think about all of the details of what you're about to leap into. Have you really thought things through?

Areas to include:

  • Market analysis. Is there actually a need or a market for what you're doing?
  • Product or service development. What kind of service or product will you actually offer?
  • Marketing. How will you draw attention to what you're doing?
  • Financial organization -- the money.
  • Risk factors. What problems might crop up and how will you handle them?

Spend some time on this. Include everything that comes to mind, and flesh out details on every point. Don't sweat the formality -- just focus on ideas. The more effort you put in here, the easier it will be to make this all work when things get rolling.

Now rewrite that business plan. Many freelancers put only minimal effort into a business plan, if they bother at all. Big mistake.

I suggest using a self-imposed deadline of sorts. Arrange to show your business plan to someone you trust on a certain date to gather input. Putting that deadline in place will keep you focused on the project, as you'll want to present something reasonable.

Then, when you deliver it, ask for feedback of all kinds. What you're really asking for is advice on the work you intend to do. This is a double-check to make sure you've thought everything through.

When you get the suggestions, use them to rewrite your plan. Then repeat, perhaps with another person who might read it and offer suggestions. A few such repetitions will go a long way toward creating a plan that works.

A good business plan isn't a boring waste of your time. It's a great way to make sure all of your bases are covered, and often the revision process is the most powerful part.

Find a mentor. Who can you take that business plan to? A mentor, that's who.

Seek out someone who knows what he or she is talking about and who isn't a potential competitor. Look for someone experienced at freelancing in a tangential field. Be specific in your questions and don't take criticism personally. It's offered with the goal of making you better, not cutting you down.

Recognize that the person is probably busy and contribute some value to the relationship by promoting that person's work or offering something of value. For example, if you're a nascent blogger and would like to attract a professional blogger as a mentor, spend time promoting the blogger's best stuff. Write about it on your own blog and talk about it on Twitter. Buy the blogger's book and write a review. Participate in that person's comments and other conversations online.

Actions like these make a mentoring relationship a fair value exchange instead of a "gimme gimme gimme" relationship.

I wrote a detailed guide on finding a mentor that can be useful.

Make it easy for people to see the good stuff you can do. Create an online presence that makes it very easy for people to find your best work. Regardless of whether you're doing online work or not, have a Web site with an easy-to-remember URL that contains links to examples of the best stuff you've created. Join social-networking services (Facebook and LinkedIn) and make professional pages about yourself that clearly show off your best side.

If people hear about you, they're going to Google you. You want the first things they find to be good, positive and impressive. Never take the attitude that you can appear antisocial and that if they don't like it, they can walk. That attitude will push many potential clients away because you'll seem unreliable from the get-go. There is never a downside to appearing friendly and accessible.

Communicate, communicate, communicate. The more you talk, the more likely people are to discover you. Share your thoughts and ideas and comments as much as you can, as widely as you can.

Start a blog. Join social media sites (Twitter and Facebook, for starters). Most importantly, join conversations. Link to interesting people and ideas on your blog and offer your take. Follow interesting people on Twitter and respond to the things they say. Comment on interesting blogs (with a link back to your own, of course) and make worthwhile comments.

Most important, stick generally to your area of expertise, but don't be afraid to jump into topics that are at best tangentially related. The goal is to make people interested in what you're doing, and the best way to do that is to always speak from your heart and your mind. Be positive, put your voice out there, and good things will happen.

Build connections with local small business/entrepreneurship groups. Even if your work is outside of your community -- online work, for example, or freelancing work for remote enterprises -- it's worthwhile to engage with local small businesses and entrepreneurs. After all, that's what you are. Such groups are almost always sources of good ideas and leads for areas where you might improve, and they're also places where you can float new ideas and gauge them. Even better, leadership in such groups provides ways to connect with others via conferences, meetings and so forth.

Get involved in peer groups, both in your own physical community and in your professional community, and don't be afraid to dive right in and participate, even before you've made the leap. The number of valuable connections you'll make there will pay off time and time again.

Have a place where you can focus on work -- and only work. Many freelancers start off working at the desk in the corner of the living room, the same one that houses lots of personal material. What often happens is that the personal material begins to interfere with the professional work and the lines begin to blur. You find yourself working when you should be engaged in personal activity, and doing personal things when you need to be working.

Find a location that you can devote solely to your work. For example, a room in our home serves as my office. When I need to work, I go in there and close the door and I'm in work" mode. When I leave that room, I'm no longer in work mode (unless I'm headed out to do some research).

Without that barrier, it would be incredibly easy for me to constantly take my eye off the ball, and if I did that, I would constantly find myself falling behind on my work.

Build your current bridges as strong as you can -- and don't burn them when you leave. Many people, as they begin to transition mentally into freelancing, let their current work relationships slide, deciding that they don't matter. Actually, they matter more now than they did before.

Here's why: The strong connections you have now will continue to serve you well after your transition. The connections may provide you with new clients and interesting angles to pursue. Plus, if freelancing doesn't work out, you have a strong foot in the door for returning.

On the other hand, if you let those relationships burn out, you'll miss out on those opportunities -- and that safety net.

Practice, practice, practice. This is perhaps the most useful lesson of all. If you want to be a real standout in your area of expertise, keep practicing at it. Study it. Try new things, and work to get better at the things you already do. In short, practice every single day.

If you're a writer, write (and share it, via a blog). If you're a graphic designer, make designs and share them (via Flickr or other avenues). If you're a musician, practice daily and share demos with the world. Doing this not only makes you better, but it shows that you're a hard worker and helps you get a better grasp on what people like and what they don't like.

As time goes on, you'll get better and better at what you do, and you'll have a long track record that shows how diligent you are at your work.

A final tip: Dig into freelancing/self-employment resources and communities. Here are five Web sites I visit all the time for advice and thoughts on being self-employed and accepting freelance work.

  • FreelanceSwitch is my Web site of choice for thoughtful and insightful conversation on freelancing and self-employment issues. It's a daily read for me.
  • Elance is a clearinghouse of freelancing opportunities of all stripes. I like to keep an eye on freelancing opportunities in several areas.
  • Guru.com is a similar clearinghouse for freelancing opportunities.
  • Web Worker Daily is a must-read If you do computer-based freelancing. Again, I read this one almost daily.
  • Freelance Folder offers a ton of widely varied and interesting advice on freelancing topics.

Good luck!

Related reading at The Simple Dollar:

Everything you ever really needed to know about personal finance

The best money advice in 10 words or less

Blending work and family: How we do it

Comments

 

Trent forgot to mention the most important part of his business plan; keep your spouse working for the insurance and basic expenses.

Don't change from a secure good paying job that you hate to a less secure, lower paying self employment that you hate.  Having expertise is not loving what you do, and to be self employed you need to love what you do.   If you do, the tight budget, cutbacks in luxuries, and long hours are all very much worth it.

plan to work 5 AM to 7 or 9 PM 7 days a week.  If you log fewer hours, you're not trying hard enough.

Don't forget to put money back for the tax man.

What you make isn't all for you to spend.

I've graduated from business school, I currently have a job that pays pretty well, my wife works, I'm interseted in having my own business. My problem is that I do not know what I would offer as a service or product. I simply draw a blank when I think of it. I feel that if I were trully cut out to be self employed I would know exactly what my passion is without a doubt.

Be prepared to learn/understand what many business people complain about----high taxes.  (The system is set-up to hide true tax rates from employees, as the business pays half of them.  No wonder tax day is opposite the calendar from election day.  Imagine how voting would be effected if you voted at the same time you were writing tax checks to the IRS?)

As a self employed person, you will pay 15.3 percent of your net earnings in SS and Medicare taxes.  Plus any State income taxes.  Plus the federal income taxes.

Then learn about another item business people complian about --health insurance.  Be ready to pay hundreds per month for this expense.

These expense will probably take about 1/2 of your "net."  That's right, you will work for the government/society about 1/2 of the time.   Is it any wonder few people succeed?  Or have the incentive to try?  For example, in my State (Michigan) the taxes would be (at the 28 percent Federal bracket) 28+15.3+4.6= 47.9 percent.  Then you have other fees---LLC annual incorporation, etc.  If you hire employees to work for you, you can add workers compensation insurance.

Also, have enough savings to cover at least one year of expenses.  Business will take time to ramp-up (if you are successful).

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