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Monday, March 14, 2016

5 Tips for Success For Freelancers

1. Begin with Full-Time Work


This can be a bit of a challenge if you have no prior experience
and if you are primarily self-taught. Without credentials from a
 school and with no samples of work that have actually been paid
 for, you are competing with others who already have a “leg-up.”
One of the things you can do is contribute to open-source projects
that are out there, such as those on GitHub. You can build a
technical portfolio from such projects and demonstrate you skills
 to potential employers.



Here are a number of important skills you can pick up once you are employed by a company:

You will learn how the business side of a development company operates
You will have time to enhance your skills
You will learn how to work with clients of all “stripes.”
You’ll have the chance to build up some savings which you will need when making the move to freelancing.



2. Start Building Your Portfolio

Begin a web-based portfolio as soon as you are hired, and put every project
 in there. These can be categorized with hyperlinks. At the same time that
 you are developing that portfolio, begin to work on your resume. Here you
will provide the details of each of the projects in your portfolio,
explaining the client requirements, the scope of the project and its
ultimate success. Here you will have the link to the specific project.

In the end, you will most likely weed out projects and choose which ones
you will actually discuss in your resume or CV, but right now, provide
 detailed descriptions and process explanations for them all. As a web
 developer, there may be other related projects that your employer will assign.
 Gladly assume them and, as you get each project done, add it to your portfolio
 and resume too. It’s good to show versatility. Again, the time to clean and
 polish both of these things will come later when you get ready to make your
 move. Right now they are working rough drafts.

3. Find Your Niche

Freelance developers who do really well have established themselves as the “go-to”
people for very specific things – sort of like specialists in medicine or law.
 There are “Jack-of-all Trades” developers who will do a good job on most anything,
 but then there are the specialists who do a good job on most anything, but a
really stunning job in a few key areas. To become a specialist, consider taking
up a new language, or keep upgrading your skill set on a couple of those you
already know. Take online courses and earn certificates; pick up skill in complementary
 areas such as UX or UI design. To be able to design and develop together makes
you far more valuable as a freelancer – a one-stop shop so to speak for someone
in need of a website from scratch.

As a niche expert with complementary skills sets, you will have a much easier
time marketing your personal brand. If you are not certain what programming
niche(s) you should choose, these are pretty hot right not:

Ruby on Rails: This is the preferred open source framework for startups all
over the globe right now.
Swift: This is Apple’s language for Cocoa and Cocoa Touch. It is specifically
 structured for iOS development – hot, hot, hot.
Node.js: A platform for building fast and scalable applications. A lot of
developing experts believe that it will become a big competitor to Ruby on
Rails pretty quickly.


4. Network


You should begin to network from the day you land your feet into your job.
There are so many developer communities out there, all of which have meet-ups,
 either on or offline. Begin with your colleagues at your job. Have
conversations about things beyond the scope of your current project(s) – the
 more you learn about project variety and the business operations, the better.

It goes without saying that you will also need to have a LinkedIn profile and
join groups on that site. Participate in discussions in all niche and niche-related
 groups, so you’re your name becomes known. Show your expertise through those conversations.

Get on Instagram and display carousels of projects in various stages and, of
 course, the final product. Start showing some of your projects on your Facebook
 Page. Follow other freelance developers and get involved in conversations with them.
 Check out development blogs and become a contributor.

All of these activities will spread your personal brand, and you can do this even
 before you strike out on your own. You will probably have a “conflict of interest”
 clause where you work, so you cannot take on side projects while you are employed,
 but having the contacts in advance will make getting gigs later much easier.

5. The Day Comes



You will have a lot to do when you launch. Set up your website with your portfolio
 (which should be well-organized if you have kept up with it). Go full-steam ahead
 on your marketing.

Let all of your contacts know that you are open for business. Ask for referrals.
Ask colleagues you know for overflow work if they have any.
Get your profile on as many freelance clearinghouses as possible – Freelancer.com,
 ODesk, Elance, and Guru are just a few that come to mind.
Beyond your self-promotion which is almost a full-time job in the beginning, you
 will have all of the other aspects of running a business. If you have prepared
yourself, you will be ready to assume budgeting, marketing, invoices, and tax
requirements. There are great apps out there to do a lot of this for you, so
consider outsourcing some of your paperwork. Just don’t ignore the day-to-day
operations and then have to play catch-up after a large backlog has developed.

Becoming a freelancer is a big leap. It will take superior organizational skills
and a willingness to put in far longer hours than you did working for someone else.
 If you have the passion for this; if you have planned in advance; if you can treat
 your freelancing as a business, then you have the recipe for success.

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