Archive for the ‘Freelancing’ Category

Back To Our Regularly Scheduled Program

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

nicopolitan: “The more I listen to you guys sit and go through the music production process even while Art‘s still in the composition stage, the more I want to work on my own music.”

TheFoolishHeart: “So write music.”

nicopolitan: “I feel guilty when I work on music.  It makes me think that if I’ve already got time to burn, I should be spending more time getting work done on freelance assignments and pet project obligations.”

TheFoolishHeart: “Fuck it.  Just do what makes you happy.”

nicopolitan: “Oh, they both make me happy.  Making music makes me happy, and working on the internet makes me happy.  It’s just that freelance makes me money–”

TheFoolishHeart: “Maybe just don’t think about money, then. Do what you love, and the money will come later.  Freelance makes you money now, but maybe music will make you money later on. You just have to remember that it’s what you do that defines you.”

Inadvertently, my roommate has packed Greek ontology and a quote from Thoreau into simple, everyday philosophy for living in the modern era and keeping your sanity.

If I hadn’t lived with a bunch of creative types in the same household, I don’t think I would have gotten this idealistic response to the conversation topic.  My parents would say, “Work hard, as hard as you can, and be proud of your hard work.”  My college friends would say, “slow down with the work, you’re fucking crazy.” My high school friends would say… nothing, because I don’t really keep in touch with them.

So this is a short post.  I was just curious:

Given the topic, what does the internet say?

Telos

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

telos |ˈteläs; ˈtē-|
noun ( pl. teloi |ˈteloi; ˈtēloi|) chiefly Philosophy or poetic/literary
an ultimate object or aim.
ORIGIN Greek, literally ‘end.’

To be perfectly honest, I myself don’t know where I’m going with this lifestyle I’m leading. This isn’t a statement that’s supposed to induct me into the ranks of a ‘lost generation’ or the hopelessly misunderstood.  There is not much of a deeper meaning to this.  I’m saying this because I’m not sure what is the point of me working as much as I have been lately.

This also isn’t to say my work is pointless.  This can be supported by the fact that my workload has been gaining weight, which is a good sign considering that whole Recession plague (no, not H1N1).  I’m also trying to avoid sounding like I’m bragging that I actually have a job in this day and age.

My point: my freelance side projects and taking work home from my main job have made recreational time kind of scarce. I’m even writing sentences of this post in between emails, Photoshop, field research, code, PowerPoint, and spreadsheets.

Don’t get me wrong, I love what I’m doing and it’s a good thing I love what I do for a living. Yes, sometimes I even love the spreadsheets.

And sure, like any kind of career, parts of it are difficult and sometimes, you will want to bludgeon someone with a keyboard. After all, nothing good was ever won easily.

But unlike most other careers, working for the internet is really vague about what is the end-goal.  To become a consultant? An independent contractor? A professor? A CEO? A unicorn?

When I take a step back and try to think about where I want to take my career path, I realize that I’m already doing what I set out to do in the first place:

Working in, for, with, via, and on the internet.

If this is a series of tubes, I feel like I’ve scored in becoming a train conductor. I don’t take shit for granted. I am lucky to be where I am and I’m happy I worked that hard to get here.

But I’ve been working a lot lately, and to what end?  To work more? To work even harder?

Maybe the means are the end. If hard work is its own reward, then that explains my workoholism.

And maybe this post, which said really nothing more than “Nico is working,” might be a signal.

If I’ve already found a good (albeit confusing) place to be professionally…

Maybe I should work on finding a good (and just as confusing) place to be personally.

And from this point forward, I’m open to suggestions.

Freelancing In 3 Easy (read: Oversimplified) Steps

Monday, July 20th, 2009

twitter_erinichristine_freelancing

Why, yes, @erinichristine, I believe that you are!

A lot of people I know do, in fact, have the hustle to figure out this kind of lifestyle.  But at the same time, a lot of us sometimes get so caught up in doing the actual work that we forget some of the main tenets to make sure the process moves smoothly.  Yes, even those of us who have been doing this for years. But when you explain the “formal” steps to the uninitiated, you remember, “Oh, yeah!  That’s how it goes.” And it’s always good to get a reminder.

Step 1: Biz Dev

The initial task is a simple one: network, network, network.  Don’t delete ANY numbers you might save on your phone.  Be socially extroverted. Respond to emails. Your portfolio doesn’t have to be done (though it does help), you just have to know what you can do.

That leads to the next sub-step: Capabilities.  Once you have someone interested in what you can do, be sure to explain to them what is possible from your end of things.  You don’t want a client requesting something way outlandish from the get-go, even though that’s what you’re going to shoot for (you overachiever, you).  If they really need something you can’t do like Flash, consider cutting one of your buddies in on the deal. Don’t say “that’s not in my skillset”, just say “yes, I know someone that can do that.” Because chances are, you do.

Once you and your respective clients know what are your services to be rendered, you need to send everyone something that is called an SOW. A Statement of Work contains the timelines, milestones, services, overhead, and bottom-line costs to hire you for the job. These sometimes go through a number of drafts before everyone settles on an agreement, but it’s important to be meticulous about this because this is essentially your contract, and yes, that includes signatures.

As a useful note, an SOW guarantees that you don’t have to do anymore than you are asked to do.  Being asked to do something outside of the scope of work warrants an additional fee. I know from experience that sometimes I take this for granted and have been ROYALLY SCREWED for not calculating for additional work in the first place.  So, please, do this before setting to any kind of work.

And now… to work!

Step 2: Execution

Do what you promised to do, but when you report in, try to translate what you’re doing into plain English for your client. Use metaphors and analogies to explain technical processes, use figures and graphs where applicable. They don’t need to know the step-by-step process, they just need to know what they’re spending their money on.

Step 3: Invoicing

Ok!  All done?  All the revisions are cleared the approval process?

Ok.  It’s time to get paid.

I hope you logged your hours because now is the time you tabulate them.  If you negotiated a flat fee per service (which is my style, personally) then you need to match those services against timelines.  If you agreed on an hourly / daily rate, you’ll need to tabulate all of this.

It’s also polite to include a postmortem report for everything that happened during the execution period, and the results that ensued.

Incessantly Frequently Asked Questions

“But what does invoicing look like?” Well, I’m not going to send you one of my own invoices, but you might want to consider using a free invoicing service like Curdbee or Billing Boss if you’re unsure about how to invoice properly. Ah, to live in the future.

“How much should I charge?” It’s different for everyone, really.  Chat up your fellow freelancers and see what they charge for their services.  Don’t undercut them too harshly because you don’t want to be working for peanuts.  Unless you’ve found some sort of peanut-barter-black-market. (Heh. “Peanut barter”…)

“How do I find new business contacts?” …Oh, I dunno, the internet is a good place to start. But also, and not surprisingly, going out for drinks for various reasons.  You don’t even need to drink, you just have to be social.  You’d be surprised how many people have pet projects swimming around in their heads.  These ideas gain buoyancy from alcohol, for some reason.  It’s either that, or my industry is saturated with very industrious drunks.

Go with the Flow

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Have I been showing my geekery lately? Not as much, sadly.

But oh, what do we have here?  (There!–>)

Aside from immensely enjoying Firefox 3 now that I’ve tricked it out (See Lifehacker), there hasn’t been anything I’ve found worth talking about concerning geekery other than video games. I mean, web development changes as far as the content you create goes, but the means to do it are usually pretty consistent.

Not today, kiddies. If you are a web developer and you need something way lighter than the nightmare that is Dreamweaver* (you see what I did there?), you might want to look into something that was just recently brought to my attention: Flow by Extendmac.

I have it, I love it, I like how I can edit remote files and use an FTP AT THE SAME DAMN TIME WITH ONLY ONE PROGRAM, and I am really digging concurrent FTP connections.  And did I mention that it’s light as a feather on your OS? Oh, about that: It’s for OS X Leopard only. So, Mac power users rejoice! We have a simple solution, and it’s about damn time.  BBEdit is great too, but it’s nowhere near as light as Flow.

Web dev is a blast with this little app.  I feel so much lighter!  Dumping Dreamweaver was like taking a long overdue poop.  An interweb poop. (an interpoop?)

…Maybe I should refrain from referencing bodily functions when talking about a program called “Flow”, but whatever.  No point in editing that out.  If I have the image in my head you might as well, too.

(PC user? I didn’t forget about you guys. Try EditPlus, which has been around for a while but it’s still notably effective.)

*To be fair, Dreamweaver has made some significant improvements since Adobe bought it. But it’s still heavier than a Scandinavian death metal band and slower than the continental drift, so that’s one tall glass of fail as far as I’m concerned.

EEEEeeeeeexbox360!

Monday, February 18th, 2008

I just checked the repair status of my Xbox 360 and my account says that the unit has been repaired and has been shipped back to the customer! I’m the customer! It will be shipped back to me! The unit!

I’m sorry, I haven’t been this excited since purchasing the Orange Box. I’m going to throw a party. And there will be cake! Ok, I’m lying, there won’t be cake.

As excited as I am for getting my 360 back, this may be bad timing as my freelance work, especially in the Photoshop department (Hi Conrad!), has recently picked up. This time, it’s pro bono stuff for portfolio-ing, which I actually seem to enjoy more than the pressure of paid gigs.

And speaking of paid gigs, nobody told me that half of freelancing work is really just keeping it going. It’s seriously 40% actual work and 60% client-project management. One of these days, I’m going to ask some people to jump on this train and help me manage accounts and charge my clients because I am getting sick of explaining what I do, how much it will cost, then doing it, and then explaining what I’ve done, and explaining why what I’ve done costs [x] amount of money.

Does anyone (in the LA area) want to make a start-up? I’m thinking I may need some help here.

Freelancing For Free

Friday, December 21st, 2007

I’m a little excited to get to work from home over my break – because although you generally want to take a “vacation,” I have a lot to do when my time suddenly frees up. Namely, that of finally putting in more work on my pro bono projects. What is that, anyways – A “va-ca-tion”? Is that like vacating? Getting out and going somewhere? What’s that like?

You know, on a lot of free nights I find myself picking up work to do and I forget sometimes that I am a workaholic…

This reminds me, I have to put up my portfolio sometime soon and do a quick brush over my work to make sure it’s W3C compliant. Because I let people touch my code. I’m a dirty, dirty, dev. (Oh shit, I just checked some of them and I DO have a lot of work ahead of me.)

In any case, my idea of a vacation is cleaning up a lot more of my web development projects. And I wonder why I lack a social life?

Oh, well. At least I have shows coming up for two of the bands I’m in right now, and that’ll get me out of the house.

Deadlines

Monday, October 1st, 2007

I met deadline! YES. Now to invoice this mofo and get my ass PAID.

In a good mood today, because I’m back to being able to get sleep. Awesome.

Kill Me Now.

Sunday, September 23rd, 2007

I just spent an entire day re-working an information architecture and I’ve just been told to change the entire thing. I gave up my Friday night busting my ass on work that I have just recently found out to be relatively pointless.

Fuck.

At the rate that shit is getting changed around on this project I will totally not meet deadline. When the hell am I going to be able to do any pro bono work? Never. Not if this keeps up. Goddamit.

And to top it off, my tinnitus is acting up because of how ungodly loud it was on Saturday night. The music wasn’t bad, but you pay a price for liking your live music on the loud side of things.

aaaarrrgh bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and bitch and moan and I am all of a sudden in a bad mood.

All That Jazz

Thursday, September 20th, 2007

Stayed up late last night freelancing at the bar hooking up an online shopping cart and reworking an information architecture.

When I move further west into LA, I plan to be working from the bar a lot, since I was the one to install the wifi there in the first place. How badass is it, though, to be all nrrdcore up in a bar? Most coders I know do the coffee shop thing, and that’s hackneyed to the death; but cafe’s have caffeine and wifi, which are two of many necessary things for long periods of coding.

I’m in a good mood because although I have a lot of work ahead of me, I did get a lot done last night, and had the opportunity to listen to some live jazz while I was at it. I forget how nice and conducive to thinking jazz is when it’s not traditional hard bop or that godforsaken smooth tripe – just somewhere in between. You know, the in-between of fast and slow, kinda post-Weather Report sound. (Weather Report seems to be becoming a theme lately, apparently.) Not too many flourishes, upbeat but not in your face, not lazy, just lilting left and right with hooky melodies that are not on the cheesy side.

One cool thing about last night: the sax player freelances the same way that I do! We had fun talking about job boards, the aesthetics of CSS, the craze over PHP and AJAX, the pointlessness of Flash intros, how freelancing is such a hustle, and just being general code monkeys. The man also knows how to fake a standard better than most jazz players I meet at the bar – I personally thought he had a fake book in front of him but it turns out he was just looking over the shoulder of the bassist every once in a while. Impressive memory!

And though I’ve been in a general lack of sleep lately, I’m at the point where I’m used to it. The first couple of days of sleep deprivation are pretty harsh, but after day two, you start to coast and power through it all. I’m at that point now, and I have to say I feel pretty okay, even with all the work ahead of me. I guess the night of jazz helped. Who knew?

In unrelated things, it seems I should make this blog more media rich. So I’m going to.

Here’s a picture of an onion ring in a carrying case fashioned out of a napkin, courtesy of Mahea.

oring.jpg
click to enlarge

Birthdays, Everybody! / Heavy Up!

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

Code Cake I have to post Mahea‘s cake from this weekend because I feel it’s an ingenuous idea. She did disclaim that the code was wrong, but some leeway is granted because there simply isn’t enough cake to write it all out. Cakes don’t scroll, after all.

Parsing errors aside, Vince and Evan’s cake was not only delicious, but vegan (!).

I also should say that every damn week I’ve attended a birthday. Seriously, everyone was born in August or September. And then there’s somewhat of a dry season in the first half of the year, save for Stuart, and since time passes more quickly as a young person in the working force, these are coming at me so fast I don’t know what to do with them.

*******

de Wiki:

Heavy-up is an advertising term referring to a high concentration of advertising for a short period of time in a media schedule. If an advertiser’s product is more likely to be used at one specific time than at another, the advertiser may choose to heavy-up the advertising for that time period. For example, a candy manufacturer may opt for heavy-up advertising during the two weeks prior to Halloween.

I am currently in a heavy up for my freelance work, and I hope my biology doesn’t crap out on me like it usually does when I treat myself poorly in favor of work. We’ll see what happens…