According
to a recent study by Upwork and the Freelancers Union, the most common
places for freelancers to pick up work are friends and family (36%),
professional contacts (35%), and online job platforms (29%) like Upwork,
Freelancer.com, Guru, and even Craigslist.
This
breakdown spells trouble for some. American workers looking for projects on
online marketplaces, for instance, are often competing with workers who live in
countries where the dollar is strong. That means many foreign workers can
accept far lower rates. If you can hire someone to transcribe an interview for
$3 an hour, you aren’t giving that contract to a freelancer charging $15.
So
where else can freelancers find work? Just ask these ten people, who picked up
gigs in some unexpected places.
1. TAP YOUR DATING LIFE
Joy
Yap found freelance work by unintentionally mixing business with pleasure. She
went on a Tinder date with an entrepreneur who was just about to launch a
company.
They
didn’t hit it off romantically, Yap recalls. But, remembering her line of work,
the entrepreneur reached out a couple months later with an offer to do some
freelance marketing for his startup. “I agreed!” she says. “I’ve been doing
freelance work for him off and on for about a year now, and saw the company
grow from inception into a million dollar company today.”
Anyone
who’s used an app like Tinder knows that modern dating often involves a little
harmless cyber-stalking to gather extra intel on the person you’ve just met or
are planning to meet. “One funny way I got a client on Fiverr,” says Alex
Genadinik, referring to the gig marketplace, “was from a girl I was dating
about a year ago. Early on during our dating, she and her friends decided to
Google my name, which is very unique, and my Fiverr profile was one of the
things that came up in their search.”
The
woman and her friends shared Genadinik’s Fiverr profile with someone they knew
who was looking for his line of freelance work, and the two ended up striking a
deal. “All along I thought he was just a regular client that randomly found me
on the internet,” says Genadinik. It was only months later that the woman let
him know she’d played professional matchmaker. “[It] was pretty embarrassing
for me because everyone was clued in except me,” Genadinik says, but hey—he got
the work.
2. ADVERTISE IN REAL TIME
If
you’re a freelancer, chances are you’ve sat at coffee shops with your nose in
your laptop. So why not let passersby know exactly what you’re doing and that
you’re available for hire?
Shayla
Price says she landed a gig by creating and placing a makeshift placard saying
“freelance writer” in front of her computer while working at Starbucks and
other public places. Price says she’s received a few inquiries every time she
whips out the placard.
3. EMAIL THE CEO DIRECTLY
“I’ve
been obsessed with a large, multinational hair care brand for many years now,”
says Termeh Mazhari, “so when I became a freelancer, I decided to just email
the CEO directly.”
Going
straight to the source may sound like a waste of time—execs usually aren’t the
ones hiring contractors. But in Mazhari’s case, it paid off. “I told her about
myself and the value I could bring to the company, and to my great surprise her
assistant wrote me back and arranged a meeting with the CEO at their posh
Manhattan office!”
What’s
more, Mazhari landed more than just a tiny one-off project this way. “I ended
up getting a year-long consulting gig with the brand, even though they already
had a large internal PR team as well as multiple external agencies working with
them.”
4. HUSTLE FOR FACEBOOK SHOUT-OUTS
After
Stephanie Moore got laid off, she decided freelance full time and turned to
Facebook to market her services.
“It
started with one client . . . that I met through Facebook. She was very popular
with a national brand,” Moore recalls, so she decided to attend one of the
client’s networking events. There, Moore told her she wanted to “shift my focus
from marketing and design to PR,” and the client “agreed to be my guinea pig.”
Their
bargain went like this: “After each big accomplishment,” Moore says, “she would
shout me out on Facebook as her publicist. Every time she tagged me, there was
a guaranteed client on the way. All of her friends and potential clients began
to reach out and ask for press releases, designs, etc. The more work I did, the
more tagging I would get.” By tapping into one happy client with the influence
to amplify Moore’s work, offers began piling up. “People would post my designs
tagging me in the post, almost bragging that Stephanie Moore did it.”
Like
another “solopreneur” who recently shared her method with Fast
Company, Moore never thought Facebook could drive so much of her business—95%
of which she now estimates comes from the social network.
5. OWN YOUR OUT-OF-THE-BOX THINKING
If
you want to freelance, you have to be willing to share your ideas, even if
you’re not sure they will be well received. Don’t wait for the perfect,
full-proof pitch to go out and get your gig.
Just
look at Chris Post. He held steadfast to his out-of-the-box thinking when he
was building his freelance business. He says,
“At
the time, just about every local property management company was trying to hold
onto and gain tenants by offering them one or more months of free rent.
I
had previously worked as a commercial real estate agent, and made a pitch to a
property management company I was friendly with from that time: Instead of
offering free rent to tenants, offer marketing assistance in the form of a free
website in exchange for signing a year lease. They would spend less paying me
to build a website than they would lose by deducting a month’s worth of rent.”
Post’s
freelance career has now become a full-blown web development and marketing
company called Post Modern Marketing.
6. NETWORK ON INSTAGRAM
Mallory
Musante is one of the co-founders of Bold & Pop, a collective of social
media, branding and web design freelancers. While they mainly find new clients
from referrals, they occasionally use freelancing sites to find work. In this
case, they sent a proposal to a client, researched the company a little
further, and decided to follow all of their social media accounts. Musante
never heard back so assumed the company had gone with another freelancer.
But
wait—Instagram to the rescue. She says, “we were surprised when we received an
email through our website requesting more information on our social media
marketing services. While they didn’t remember us submitting a proposal on the
freelancing site, we were able to catch their eye on Instagram by occasionally
networking with them.”
7. PARTICIPATE IN YOUR COMMUNITY
Abandoning
the traditional workplace can feel isolating, participating in your local
community can be a remedy, as well as a fantastic place to drum up freelance
work. Photographer Tammy Lamoureux shares a great example of community
involvement leading to jobs.
“Wanting
to get more product photography gigs, we started hitting up our local craft
fairs and farmer’s markets. We get a room full of small businesses who
will most likely need professional photos of their merchandise at some point or
another. So, go around from booth to booth and chat with the vendors.
Take some photos of their products and make sure to get their contact info so
you can send them the shots later. They will appreciate the free photos,
and you’ll be top of mind the next time they are in need of some product
photos. We did this at one craft fair, and ended up with five new clients for
about 2 hours worth of work.”
8. GO WITH YOUR GUT
Kelly
Boyer Sagert’s usually picks freelance work based on the right amount of income
attached to it. But sometimes, she decides to go with a gut feeling to see what
happens. She explains how one of those gut-driven exceptions landed her
unexpectedly great work:
“A
few years ago, a nonprofit agency asked me to take their research about the
first woman to solo hike the Appalachian Trail and turn it into an ebook. I did
— and then they asked for it to also be written as a first person storytelling
performance, so I did. Concurrently, the agency was having some of their video
footage turned into a mini-documentary and discovered that they couldn’t get
the grant funding they wanted/needed unless a play was written on the subject.
So, I wrote a play script and we talked to a theater that had produced some of
my work in the past, and they put on the play. So, the funding was secured, the
documentary was created and, since my play was used as the foundation, I got
writing credits — and the documentary was picked up by PBS: Trail Magic: the
Grandma Gatewood Story.”
9. TELL PROSPECTS WHAT THEIR COMPETITORS ARE UP
TO
If
one company is looking for services, then their competitors are probably
looking, too—or will want to as soon as they learn of it.
“I
had one company contact me for a strategic marketing plan for the upcoming
year,” recalls freelancer Stephen Twomey. He saw that as not just one potential
opportunity but several. “I knew they were looking at other consultants as
well.”
“So,
since I knew company A was looking for something, I contacted companies B, C,
[and] D and mentioned that one of their main competitors was looking for
strategic marketing consulting”—without mentioning which one. Twomey says
“Company A ended up going with a different [contractor], but company C actually
bought a consulting package.”
The
services you offer may not belong in a creative field, but it still often takes
ingenuity to land those gigs in the first place. For just about every
freelancer, thinking outside the box can really pay off.
Have you landed freelance gigs in an unusual
way? Share your story in the comments below, on Twitter, or send me an email.
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