4.9 Keep boasting to yourself
Your client will be able to see your skill by the specific work samples in your portfolio. Paying unnecessary lip service to your range of talent is overkill. Before you know it, like Narcissus, you’ll drown in a pool of your own making. Express all your self-adulation in front of the mirror, where it will boost self-confidence you might lose later while making cold calls.
4.10 Sell clients only what they need
Develop a good understanding of your clients’ budget requirements and the competition in their industry, then select the services and products that provide the best fit. Your clients will appreciate your efforts and see through any featherbedding. Always practice the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
4.11 Remember, it’s the little things
If you’re interested in building credibility, keep your promises. Call back when you say you will, meet your deadlines, stick to delivery schedules, and stay within budget even if it costs you. Jobs are only awarded after trust has been established. A missed deadline is all it takes to shake a client’s trust in your ability.
4.12 Be businesslike in all your dealings
Whether you work with the boss’s secretary or have access to the chief executive officer, don’t drop in unannounced or overstay your welcome. Make sure you only call your client when you really need to. Access to the key decision-maker is easily lost if you abuse your privilege.
Achieving success as a freelancer is easy if you put your mind to it. Computer technology has changed many fields, and you will be required to handle massive amounts of information. For instance, technology makes it possible for you to not only design but also do some data entry, check facts, and do your own proofreading. The scope of services you offer must be greater than ever before.
Turnkey jobs bring in more money because the more work you can do yourself, the more money you can make. How well you manage various aspects of a project will determine your success. As your relationships with your clients grow, clients will rely on you as their communication beacon and will expect more from you than they might have just a few months ago. You must be dependable and progressive, and you must maintain an active interest in your clients’ successes.
Create a sense of ease when doing business and provide cost-saving tips whenever possible. Get up to date on paper stock, trends in ink and varnish applications, or the latest industry catchphrases. Present copy and design solutions that overshadow both your competition and the client’s competition. Give sound advice gleaned from your own experience as well as the experiences shared by your peers at professional meetings. There are many mediocre designers. Once a client finds a reliable creative source with the right expertise and problem-solving ability, he or she will usually cling to you. But first you must earn his or her trust.
2
Creating Your Work Environment
Starting your own business gives you many freedoms. Of course, each freedom comes with a matching responsibility. One of the most important responsibilities is to yourself — to create a work environment conducive to producing excellent output. Freelancers have to adjust to complete and total freedom while turning out excellent work in a timely manner. You’ll need to minimize distractions, organize your time, and create a routine that defines the limits of your freedom if you want to make a good living — which is the reward for creating a work environment that supports a strong work ethic.
First, set some boundaries regarding your time and space, then explain them carefully to your family (including the kids) and friends. Even if you live in a 25-room mansion, establishing boundaries right from the start will make things easier as your business grows.
Your perfect work space largely depends on the type of creative service you provide, money available to invest, and your personal preference. One freelance writer set up her home office after her cushy executive position with a major corporation evaporated. She certainly never missed her daily two-hour commute, but she couldn’t shake the feeling of being unemployed. After some serious soul-searching, she realized her need for a clear time delineation between work and home. She discovered that even a short drive to a different location supplied that separation; eventually she abandoned her home office for the well-defined structure of a rented office suite. She had a place to go, a sense of employment, and a professional office in which to meet clients. “‘Know yourself’ is my best advice to newbiz-bees,” she said, free advice from a 25-year marketing professional who couldn’t live without that commute.
1. Pros and Cons of a Portable Desktop
For writers, a reliable laptop that goes with you everywhere may suffice, especially if money is an issue. This is cutting-edge operations management and deserves applause, if for nothing more than saving a few trees. It’s also a great way to give top-notch presentations either to promote your business or to pitch an idea for a project. When you carry your business in a laptop, even the public library provides an instant office. Meetings with clients become easier, checking on project status is a phone jack or wireless connection away, and finishing off that last paragraph can be accomplished during a ride on the subway.
Of course, if you take your eyes off that precious cargo, a thief may make off with your life’s work and that’s the end of you. For your own peace of mind and protection, make sure you’ve made backup disks for all your software and everything on your computer, especially your current projects. Make sos stand for Safe or Sorry rather than the more colloquial Save Often, Stupid. Additionally, a replacement value insurance policy for your computer (just in case) may be a worthwhile investment. The insurance industry will gladly accommodate you, and a quick replacement is then just a phone call away.
Not all creative pursuits are so easily accommodated, and your business may not flourish within the restrictions of a laptop computer. Buying a second system as backup is an excellent idea, both for safety’s sake and networking capability. “Heavy-duty desktop systems are comparatively cheap and light-duty laptops are dropping in price, so I store all working documents on my laptop so I can grab it and run,” says Brian Dooley, a well-established technical writer in New Zealand. “This keeps my work within arm’s reach no matter where I’m at.” You may also have to prepare slick comprehensives for client review, collate multipage publications, and execute other precise activities that require natural light plus a stable, clean work area. The laptop office will not suffice for these extra endeavors.
2. Set Up an Efficient Home Office
If you think you need more than a cyber office or fall into the “other creative endeavor” category, here are a few tips to keep in mind when setting up your home office.
2.1 Dedicate your work space
If you live alone, you can turn your entire living space into your office, though this is not recommended, for obvious reasons. Most people have family, pets, and surprise visitors to consider when they work at home, not to mention the need to tidy up before a client appears. The ideal home office is a dedicated room with a door that locks. Why would you need a lock in your own home? The first time Junior accidentally deletes work to make room on your hard drive for his new computer game, the reason will become eminently clear. When your spouse needs poster board for a yard sale sign, locking the door will protect your five-dollar-a-sheet, double-weight, plate illustration board in your absence. Plus, the expensive