Note from Maneesh:
Today’s post is a detailed breakdown on freelancing strategy by Daniel DiPiazza at Rich20Something.
If you’ve ever wanted to learn how to leverage your skills to make extra money on the side…or leave your job entirely, freelancing is the perfect way to start.
If you like what you read here, Daniel is also hosting a free Master Class on 1/19/2015 to help you start and grow a profitable side business quickly…even if you don’t have an original idea.
You’ll learn even more advanced freelancing strategies that he didn’t get a chance to cover in this guide. (Register here)
Take it away, Daniel!
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First of all, big thanks to Maneesh for letting me share these strategies here. Today, I’m going to share with you some of the most powerful techniques I’ve learned for making money with your skills — literally overnight.
This is a detailed guide — part case study, part “how to.”
In it, I detail exactly how I started freelancing, then leveraged the process to make over $23,000 in 4 weeks online using a freelancing website called Elance.
Over the past year, I’ve gotten some feedback on the strategies I’m going to share with you, and I wanted to address 3 things with you before you start reading.
Here are the 3 most common questions I’ve received…
Question #1: “Will these strategies here work anywhere besides Elance? What if I want to use another site? What if I want to work OFFLINE?”
Yes. The strategies will work in any situation where you need to leverage your skills or sell a service to someone online OR offline. Elance, Craigslist, oDesk, Freelancer.com, Fiverr, etc. Local business, around your neighborhood and in your city. The principles for attracting clients are UNIVERSAL — you can use all this material online OR offline.
My preference is to work online because it allows maximum flexibility.
Question #2: “You mention web design in your examples. I can’t do web design. I quit!”
STOP RIGHT THERE. It’s VERY important that you only think of web design as an example/placeholder. As you read through this guide, think about it from your own perspective, with your own skills in mind. The strategies will work any skill you can think of. Even if you start with no advanced skills and have to do administrative work like typing up word documents, etc. This guide will help you book the job and make lots more money than you normally would.
Question #3: This guide is amazing, but I have some more specific questions. Where can I learn more?
Cool. I’m doing a FREE advanced freelance training on Thursday, 8/28. Check it out here and reserve your spot.
Now, without further ado, let’s jump into it!
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Have you ever thought… “Hey, I can make a basic website. Maybe I can make money doing that.” If you have, you’re not alone. Lot’s of us these days have at least basic design skills. I’d was OK at putting together basic WordPress pages…but I didn’t know if it was a monetizable skill. So I decided to open up an account on Elance and see if I could start attracting clients.
I knew I could so great work if I just could figure out how to leverage myself and be seen in the crowded marketplace.
That, my friends…was only half the battle. Here’s the breakdown…
It’s not as easy as showing up…
Competing with outsourced work is one of the biggest challenges facing Americans in the growing international workforce. In every field, from manufacturing to technology, someone with a comparable (or superior) skill set is willing to do the same work as you for drastically lower cost. It’s just the way things are these days.
The minute I logged on to Elance, I was met with the crushing realization that there were literally over 200,000 other freelance designers (most of whom were more skilled that myself), all looking for the same jobs at the same time.
This was going to be much harder than I thought.
How was I going to get clients when I was competing with all the freelance designers in the world not on the value and quality I provided , but on price? I couldn’t compete on price. My rent is $2,897/month (Venice Beach, CA…WTF….).
I really couldn’t afford to spend hours on a $300 website. I was at a loss.
And then, it occurred to me: I needed to distance myself from the bottom feeders and become a “premium service provider”.
Is Mercedes Benz bashful about charging $80,000 for an E-Class? I think not. They are widely perceived as a luxury brand and come with ridiculous customer service to justify their price point. That’s the bracket I needed to aim for.
Premium service, premium price.
But was it even possible? Could I even do something like that on Elance? I hoped so.
First, I needed to test my assumptions.
Think about how you can apply testing to your unique situation.
Setting up the test
I designed a test to answer two primary questions:
- “Exactly what strategies do my successful competitors use to stand out in the crowd?” and then…
- “How can I completely obliterate them by being ridiculously over-prepared?”
Testing allows you to determine if a business will work while greatly reducing the risk of failure. DO IT.
Here’s how I structured the test:
1.) I set up a dummy account in order to create a fake posting looking for web developers. The purpose behind this was to find out exactly what types of proposals other developers were submitting. Here’s what the posting looked like:
The “dummy” ad
Side note: Elance generally frowns upon dummy ads. 99% of the time, nothing will happen…but if you’re going to do this, do it with an account you don’t plan on keeping just to be safe 🙂
None of the copy in the ad is random. Everything has a strategic purpose, meant to find something out about my competition. A few tactical things to notice here:
- The budget is high. According to Elance stats, most jobs go for around $1,000 across the board. So why put the price point so high? I wanted to attract the best possible candidates. What I’ve found anecdotally and through personal experience is that high prices often scare off underperformers. It’s part of the whole “the cream rises to the top” mentality. I wanted to see which contractors identified themselves as “worthy” of a $10,000 job, and see what they had to offer. Theoretically, these should be the best proposals.
- The job is marked as “fixed price” – I wanted to see what rates they would throw at me and what negotiation tactics they would use.
- I was very clear with my needs and the range of skill sets required to do the job. Ironically, these are the skill sets that I had and was trying to leverage, so I was looking for people with identical credentials to see what I was up against.
I sat back and popped a bag of Orville Redenbacher as things began to get interesting.
The results are in…
Within 30 minutes, I received 71 proposals from all over the world.
All things being equal, this means that each applicant had a 1.4% chance of being hired. Of course, my goal was to figure out how to shift these odds dramatically, but more on that later. Take a look at the breakdown by region:
Now it’s time to put ourselves in the shoes of a prospective client. So just based on initial impressions, before reading any of the actual proposals that were submitted, here are my observations:
- The lion’s share (50+%) of the bids were from India and South Asia
- North American applicants constituted about 25% of the bids
- The rest of the world made up the last 25%
Now compare the sample data above with the lifetime hiring data provided by Elance:
With over 1.5 million jobs awarded since the site’s inception, North America completely blows every other country off the map. The next closest is Australia, with barely over 150,000 jobs awarded.
If we take a step back and think about what this means, it’s pretty easy to spot an imbalance between the types of people applying for jobs and the ones doing the hiring. Mainly…
English speaking Americans do (mostly) all the hiring and every other country does (almost) all the labor. It’s actually a pretty familiar pattern, don’t you think?
Native English speakers WANT to work with other English speakers who can easily understand their needs. The problem most American freelancers run into on Elance is that since their rates are naturally higher due cost of living, they miss out on jobs by getting ruthlessly lowballed by foreigners using the volume approach.
I knew that the Americans doing the hiring WANTED to hire other Americans, but were resistant to higher American prices. I was attempting to find out how could I remove this objection and make price a non-issue.
Reading the proposals
I’d already learned a ton of information just looking at the distribution curve of applicants, but now it was time to do the actual dirty work — read the proposals. Remember my first objective: figure out exactly what the successful competition was doing.
When I opened my Elance inbox, the first feelings I had were those of nausea. I knew right away that I didn’t want to (and WASN’T going to) read through all 71 proposals. I just couldn’t. But I did notice certain elements of proposals that made them stand out.
Here’s what I found that helped me narrow down which ones I would even bother reading:
“Sponsored Proposals”: freelancers can buy monthly credits, which they use to be able to submit more proposals. These credits can also buy a “Sponsored Proposal” which sticks to the top of the page. No matter how many bids the job gets, their proposal will stay at the top. Only 3 contractors per job may be sponsored. I always looked at these for two reasons: First, I knew they were already making a small investment in me by paying to show their bid. Second, with almost 100 proposals to sift through, it was impossible to forget them.
Copy/Pitch: if they hooked me in the first line or two of their proposal with something interesting, I’d read the whole thing. This got harder as I went along, so it helped if they were on of the first 20ish applicants.
Specific reference to the project I posted, not a generic copy-paste job. This also gave me a good idea of how proficient they were at English. I just don’t feel like dealing with a communication barrier.
Price point: this is important, but for different reasons than you may expect. If someone was ridiculously low, I’d instantly forget about them. I’m not looking for bottom feeder prices and bottom feeder results. I can only speak for myself, but I suspect I’m not the only one.
Lowballing me won’t work. High prices on the other hand, would sometimes catch my eye, first as more of a “are they out of their mind”? But more often than not, it would actually draw me to their pitch, then their profile to see if they met the other criteria listed above. Even if I wasn’t prepared to spend that much, it got my attention. It made me think “I wonder what makes them so special?” This realization was key when I was devising my strategy later.
Skill set: I didn’t think this would be the last thing I looked at, but it was. Surprisingly, I only considered people’s skills after they passed the other 4 criteria.
Just for fun, here are some of the worst proposals I got (with some notes):
This guy shot me TWO messages:
This girl…sweet, but no thanks:
Once I applied all of these criteria, my pool of applicants was cut down significantly. From an original pool of 71, to I’d say 10-12 who really had all the right qualities to take the project and run with it.
So how was I supposed to choose between all those seemingly equally-qualified candidates and decide who I was going to award the job to? Personal interaction. They had to sell me. I found that when it came down to it, if everyone had similar qualifications, the only determining factor I could use to make a decision was personality. I had to actually LIKE the person. To LIKE someone, I need to feel like I have a relationship with them, even if I’ve just met them.
Most applicants didn’t take my feelings into account and certainly didn’t seem to care about building a relationship. I’m not just a piece of man-meat. I have feelings too. Once I realized that the secret to me hiring someone else was whether I liked them or not, I immediately got to work creating a strategy for my own campaign designed with one purpose only: to make myself completely irresistible to prospective clients as quickly as possible.
Identifying which clients to pitch
Before I spent time and energy pitching randomly to every client that posted a job, I took time to narrow down the best candidates. I’m not just looking for any client. I’m looking for the right client. That’s a subtle distinction, but it’s very important. I needed to find postings that showed evidence of reliable behavior on behalf of the client.
I also needed to see indicators that I’d get the price I was looking for. Typically, I don’t find it worth my time to do a website for any less than $1,000. Here are some examples of ideal candidates that I would pitch to, along with notes:
Example 1:Example 2: Example 3: Example 4:
Doing client research
After I selected who I was going to pitch to, I did detailed research so that I could approach them correctly. Client history/research:
1.) Purchase history:
- Look especially for clients that have already used Elance frequently and have spent a decent amount of money.
- 3 and 4 green dots are a good indicator that they are serious buyers.
2.) Feedback history (extremely important): If they have already purchased on Elance and have given feedback/reviews on past freelancers, this information is GOLD. Go to the profile of the potential client and look for information that will help you personalize the proposal as much as possible.
- Things they liked about past freelancers
- Complaints about past freelancers
3.) After you determine what they think about past freelancers, look for other personal details.
Personal details to looks for:
- Their name
- Profession
- Location
- Likes/dislikes
- Hobbies
- Any other relevant info
Use this information to create a completely customized proposal. In your pitch, casually throw in information that’s highly relevant to them, but doesn’t seem like you’re doing it on purpose.
Making myself irresistible by being way over-prepared
The basic premise of the next step is to create a personalized presentation for the prospective client that shows you’ve taken into careful consideration their needs, then proactively come up with solutions to their problems.
Now, you might think that since there’s no physical meeting between you and the prospective client, this type of technique wouldn’t be applicable. Dead wrong. You know what I noticed after reviewing all the pitches I received during my test?
There was not ONE video proposal. Not a single one.*
I don’t know why this is. My guess is that many people aren’t comfortable in front of the camera. But I made their discomfort my advantage.
Since I’d determined that building a relationship was the fastest way to book a job, and face-to-face is the fastest way to build a relationship, I started testing video proposals.
Holy shit. The results were insane.
But first, the formula…
*Some people reading this may be concerned that now EVERYBODY is going to do video. Trust me, they won’t. And even if they did, there are MORE than enough jobs to sustain everyone.
Creating the video submissions: How to get the right “feel” for your videos
People love stories. You must create a story that they feel emotionally connected to. As you progress, you will find the right groove and your own personal narrative, this basic framework is a great starting place and eventually you can improvise as you become more comfortable.
Creating the story arc:
a.) Introduction
- “My name (real or nickname or fake – doesn’t matter)”
- “I’m the lead developer of XYZ company”
- “I’m not part of some “big fancy firm.”
- “I had my first “real” job, hated it, decided to form my own company doing what I love.”
b.) How to build comfort and familiarity
Pretend that you’re talking to them over a lunch meeting. Be cool and at ease.
“I see you’re working on a _______ type of website. That’s really cool because _________(insert relevant personal experience. Even if it’s a stretch. It’s all about creating a compelling story.)”
Use customer research and feedback they’ve given to other freelancers to casually talk about some of your desirable characteristics — use exact wording from their profile page if possible. Go through several reviews.
You might want to Say something like THIS in your narrative:
“I guess one of the things we love best about doing this type of work is getting clients ‘unstuck’. Sometimes you just need reliable pros who really undertand your needs to step in and get amazing work done quickly. That’s the name of the game here at XYZ. We want to make working together again a no-brainer!”
As you can see, the bold text shows where I used the client’s exact wording again in the pitch process. With this type of language, you don’t even need to sell them. You’re speaking to them in their own voice.
c.) Benefits and invitation to learn more: The idea of the entire process is a “soft sell”. You’ll never mention pricing or any type of money in the initial pitch. You must create the value first. After you’ve noted the specific features they are looking for in their site, make sure to mention that we excel at those things, and a handful of others when appropriate. I like to use rich, colorful product descriptions to really make people feel the pull.
You can mention things like:
- “All the sites we build are fully responsive for all devices”
- “Breathtaking, beautiful Custom CSS (or PHP/Java/whatever is appropriate for the posting)”
- “Easy-to-manage CMS that requires little maintenance”
- “SEO/Conversion optimized”
- Anything else that fits with the scope of their project that we can fulfill. Keep it ethical, but don’t hold back.
- Use descriptive words – “beautiful, flowing, clean, responsive, sexy, stunning” and paint the picture.
As you close, keep the lines of communication open and leave the ball in their court by saying things like:
- “Let’s keep the conversation going — I’d love to hear more about what you’re working on.”
- “Even if we don’t end up working together, maybe I can help point you in the right direction or answer some questions. I’m at the computer all day anyway!”
- “Thanks for sharing some screen time with me — I look forward to talking soon.”
As you get better, you’ll develop your own style – this is just a framework. This type of soft close usually gets at least some feedback and you can feel them out to see if they are good to work with. It also comes off as very secure — you’re not begging for the job here.
By suggesting that you are completely comfortable with helping “even if we don’t end up working together” it makes you sound like you don’t need to do the work — you just want to.
Below are 3 different examples of successful pitches I’ve made that resulted in sales of over $1,000 each.
IMPORTANT: These videos are freaking LONG. 3+ minutes is TOO LONG. I’ve included them to show you real pitches that actually worked, but as I got more refined, the pitches became MUCH shorter — about 90 seconds or less. I’ve recorded a sample “improved” pitch for you after the real ones.
Notice the customization and approach I took to understanding the specific clients needs and the personal approach I took by creating a story arc. The goal isn’t to copy what I said, but to think about how you can create something similar using your own story.
Remember, no matter what field you’re in, it’s all about creating a relationship with the potential customer:
And the “improved” pitch:
See how freaking simple that was? I might even add a little bit more personalization, but I wanted to give you a general idea of how easy it COULD be. These types of simple pitches got me jobs. Cool?
What your pitch on Elance should look like:
At this point you’ve picked out your prospect, done your research and shot the quick video. Here are some samples of how I word the actual proposals in the Elance platform. It’s pretty simple and straight-forward, but I’ve also developed what appears to be a winning formula.
As with the videos, the written parts of my proposals also got shorter and shorter as I progressed. These examples below were a little wordier than I’d do now…but they STILL work.
For everyone who doesn’t feel like they can possibly be as corny as me with the “WOAH DADDIO” — haha. Uoi don’t have to do that. What can I say. I got bored doing these things and had to entertain myself.
And it STILL worked.
Sometimes you can just keep it simple and get straight to the point, like in this example:
The negotiation process and the $23,700 results
Closing the deals
After they contact you, it’s your job to reel them in using the same charismatic personality that attracted them in the first place. They will most likely have one or two of a few common questions.
Whatever your specific field of expertise is, think about possible objections from potential clients WAY AHEAD of time. Really put yourself in their shoes and create a “If they say this, I’ll say that” map in your head. Be so ridiculously overprepared to answer objections that they’re left completely awestruck and ready to buy.
Here are the 3 most common barriers I ran into trying to close the deal.
1.) Client: “I see you’re new on Elance — are you a new company.”
“We’re not a new company, we get most of our business from referrals stemming from our old jobs in corporate…but we’ve decided to branch out and try online platforms like Elance. This isn’t our first rodeo.”
Insert some details from the personalized story you told in your intro video, then refer them back to the portfolio website and reassure them that your work is awesome.
2.) Client: “Why should I pick you when I can get the work outsourced for cheaper?” (it can be a shorter variation of this, but this is how I explain it)…
“You’re right, we’re not the cheapest firm on Elance. And we battle with getting our legs cut out from under us every single day by good firms in India and Asia who do the work for a fraction of a price. So if you’re in a bind and you’re basing your decision solely on price, we might not be the right fit for you. But we see design a little differently. To us, creating a design is like two people working on a painting at the same time. Both of you want the painting to come out looking like a masterpiece, both of you want to create something beautiful…but there’s a huge communication gap there. After all, you are two very different people, with different visions. Yes, we’re masters at design work, but where we really excel…where we really shine, is taking your ideas an interpreting them — understanding them and translating them onto the page, using our expertise, so that the end result looks like it came not from two people…but directly from your imagination. It’s almost as if we’re an extension of your creativity, not just outside numbskulls fumbling to get things right. I don’t think you can expect that perspective from anybody who is going to lowball you.”
3.) Dealing with further price resistance If they are still hesitant to purchase at the lowest price you offer (mine is $750 rock bottom), be understanding and little flexible, while still demonstrating your confidence. This is a sample script I’ve used in the past:
“Typically speaking we work in a “our price is our price” type of mindset. This has come from a few years of working with dozens of different individuals and organizations who want all want the same service (design, implementation, optimization) and the same high level of service, but all at different prices.
It get’s very tricky and in the end 1 of 2 things usually happens: either you start becoming too “flexible” with your prices, stop considering time/effort and end up working yourself into the $12/hour bracket with ten low budget projects OR you do essentially the same services for two different people, while charging one person $500 and the next person $1000, and those people talk.Not good.Because of that, we are pretty firm. Our base price is always $995. We’d add the Elance fees of 8.75% on to that to protect our costs.Now, that being said, I know you’re a startup, don’t have unlimited cash and need to get the most value for your money. I also appreciate you considering us because, let’s face it…..there a lot of people overseas willing to do this work cheaply –although that cheapness would probably show! Totally get it.So we would be willing to break the price up and space out payments to lessen the financial burden on you over a period over a period of 4-6 weeks in installments.”
Bottom line: you have to be the same person in your messages that you were in your video. Upbeat, engaged, causal.
The results
I’ve been getting as high as a 70% response rate from prospective clients using all the elements above, and this is a very good thing. Since there are so many people applying for many of these jobs, it is a good sign just to be contacted by a prospective client.
Over the course of a month, I was able to land 7 jobs, one of which was a $15,000 retainer just to do occasional touch ups. All in all,
I cleared about $24,000. I kept meticulous track of how the proposals were working, so that I could track and tweak. After a certain point, I had to stop taking clients because the workload was too high. Here’s a shot of my Excel spreadsheet from the first 2 weeks.
I may not have always booked the job, but even getting a response means I’m doing the right thing:
The takeaway
So what did I learn from all this? First, I learned the value of testing, testing, testing. When you’re trying to diagnose a problem with a system, it’s literally impossible to guess the right course of action by just staring at the outside machinery. You have to dig deep and probe the inner workings so that you can validate your assumptions. If something doesn’t work, tweak it.
Finally, I was reminded how powerful human interaction can be. In the sea of noise and confusion that is the internet, it’s still very possible to get noticed and, as a result, make a living. Usually the only way to do this is to spark an interaction that leads to a relationship.
Video is a simple way to leverage that. I hope this guide serves you well. There’s plenty of room out there for all of us, so get to work!
Your opportunity: How to use this information
Well, the first obvious way you can use this information is just to copy what I did.
If you use this method on Elance, or in any other remote freelance capacity, it WILL WORK. I’ve gotten enough responses from readers and friends to validate this.
However, I know that implementing all of this can be a TEEEEENY bit overwhelming — even if it makes sense while you’re reading it.
That’s why I’m hosting a FREE Master Class on Monday, January 19th 2015 to help you start and grow a profitable side business quickly…even if you don’t have an original idea. (Click that link to sign up).
If you’re down to come, we’ll go over everything here PLUS more advanced strategies that I didn’t get to cover. If you can’t make it, sign up any way, as I’ll be sending out some cool bonuses via email 🙂
Hope to see you there!
{ 30 comments… }
I thought all your tips and advice were awesome with the exception of the fake job posting. Elance frown on it but so do hard working Elancers like myself who put time and effort into a proposal…not knowing its fake. Looking at the buyer history could avoid that but we have to sometimes have to pitch to newcomer businesses on Elance. I hope not too many freelancers try this tactic as it will drown the site with fake postings….
Awesome stuff. I’ve never ever thought to get clients on Elance or the like using video proposals. And you’re SO right — this will work. Genius! Thanks.
Wow. Thats awesome!
I’d be interested in seeing what has been paid on these projects as of yet as my experience has been that higher end projects usually see funding issues or a mass amount of work beyond scope issues with Elance.
Bloody hell I’ve been wasting my time on Elance (and friends) taking the complete wrong approach.
Basically I’ve been creating a hella huge and wordy proposal tailored to each client/job applied !
Time for lights camera action!
Love the introduction:
“My name (real or nickname or fake – doesn’t matter)”
“I’m the lead developer of XYZ company”
“I’m not part of some “big fancy firm.”
“I had my first “real” job, hated it, decided to form my own company doing what I love.”
Since all of that is true for me in my life I’ve decided to take on elance freelancing 🙂 Just came across your site today and am blown away by your content. Thanks for sharing your experience experiments!
One of the best how to guide’s around. Fantastic work!
Wow this article really is a quality, highly informative and mind provoking. Thanks!
Wow, Wow and Wow! Love this “SEXY” information.. When I read this I couldn’t stop reading. I will implement these strategies and customize them using my creativity, THANKS DANIEL!
Oh and btw, I found this too late to attend your class!.. Wish it was recorded! Good luck Daddio, keep Rockin, just no Panty Droppin!
Damn this is brilliant. I’m trying to implement it today on a couple of Elance jobs I’m applying to, but I’m running into a weird problem: my videos won’t process when they upload to Youtube. I take them using iMovie, but then when I upload, the progress bar for processing them never goes past 0%. Anyone else run into this? I’m not seeing a good answer on the Youtube or Mac help boards.
Hey I don’t know if you’re still having this issue, but it could just be that YouTube is very slow in regards to uploading videos, you could try compressing it a bit, it should still look good at 720p.
This is a very useful and detailed guide. Its really answered my question on navigating the Elance process. I putting the steps into action now. I be back with the results.. I thinking this is gonna be good!
Let us know how it goes!
Wow, this is really useful. Thanks for taking the time to put this great post together, I particularly like the sample pitch videos.
Fun post with great information. I am considering the ELance arena and will try this strategy first off as I think it fits my personality. Thanks for sharing!
Really appreciated this post. I recently did my first freelancing job using Elance but seems what helped me was more like some beginner´s luck! Within 48 hours on signing up i started my first assignment. I guess what made the difference was that
a) i happened to respond first
b) being a native speaker, which was required for the job
After that i was not succesful in catching new jobs and was rather demotivated by the competition. This article really worked as an eye-opener and the video pitch is a brilliant strategy.
Great going guys! Thanks for sharing!
Daniel, this is one of the best posts I’ve read in a while on the internet.
I noticed there was some interesting project on a site for freelance translators after reading your post. So, I created a little video pitch and sent a message to the outsourcer.
I haven’t heard from her yet, and can’t report a specific result for that reason, but everything you wrote in this post makes sense and I’m impressed by your reverse engineering approach.
Thanks for sharing this info with us.
Well, that tickled the insides, must be the good stuff. I hope you don’t mind me coming back to re-read this post,
A toast to you both for all your efforts
Great post. Out of interest, how long does the $995 website actually take you to do? ie what are the profit margins?
It was really fun+insightful reading the secret sauce of elance and the inside story of how-it-all-works. Thanks for sharing. Will give it a try and post here my two cents.
Extremely fun to read. Thanks Daniel and Maneesh!
Very good post. Since I’m from South Asia. I better not try this approach.
Such a wonderful tutorial. Just when i needed. Daniel Thank You.
Awesome detail. Sometimes I can’t believe you guys post this stuff for free…
I think my challenge will be finding the right type of job I can perform via freelance sites. I don’t have any design (web, graphic or otherwise) skills but will look around to see what I can do. Even if its transcription work :).
Thanks again!
Wow Daniel, thanks for putting this together, and Maneesh, thanks for posting this.
I’ve been fairly successful after getting onto some of the freelancing sites over the last month, mostly because my experience is miles beyond any of my competitors. I’ve had the problem, though, that some of my competitors make ridiculous claims in their profiles that might dilute the impact of my true results earned over a decade in the industry (for example, one competitor claims to have started a company that generates $22 million a year, but is still on elance lowballing proposals).
I’m committing now to trying this out and letting you know the results.
One question – have you found that what clothes you wear has any influence on your results? My industry is a bit more conservative and I also travel full time, so I basically have one button-down shirt that I can use for this and a bunch of t-shirts.
That was pretty cool, I would have never of thought to use a video proposal.
Wow that’s really cool. So I’ve been doing this sort of work on craigslist and just noticed how terrible my own pitches were. No wonder I got the wrong clients. I wouldn’t hire me. Thanks much. Correct Mistakes. Checked. Really awesome data driven post!
Solid post. I like your approach. One more tip – watch for easter eggs. People who have been on Elance for a while will ask for seemingly odd things like including specific words in your proposal so that they can just ignore the cut-and-paste crowd. Some of my friends will use more than one thing just to make sure that potential workers really read their posting and want the work.
A few months back I searched for a CPA firm on elance to prepare a small business tax return. I chose a firm from upstate New York because they were personable and their competence showed across the entire experience. They were 2-3x the cost of the India and Philippines options and worth it.
Very useful post, thank you! Addressed all the difficulties I’ve been having getting work on elance as a UK-based Chinese translator.