Why freelancing is the right path for progress
Why freelancing is the right path for progress.
As a freelancer
working in Illustration over the past 7 years, I feel I reached a point where
I'm able to pull off a good many of thoughts about Illustration as a career in
different environments. After working for companies for a period of time, I
decided to make a move and tried to see where working exclusively as an online
remote worker would take me. At that time, I started to become aware that
online work was a fast growing market, and I recognized a couple of the advantages
in working in that environment. The only thing that made me nervous about the
decision was the fact that I was following mainly my instincts, and I had no other way of finding out if those
instincts were a given, other than diving into uncertainty. Sure that it wasn't
easy, and during the first year or two after leaving the safe check at the end
of the month, I was still wondering if that was really the right move, the
number of commission requests I was getting per month were so irregular that
they seemed to follow no logic, with no relation with the increasingly higher
amount of effort and time consumed I was putting in each project and job
search. But soon I realized that was just the initial stage - I started to
notice a correlation between my efforts and a slow progress in number of
requests per month. A shy increase in the beginning, but visible enough for my
nervous system to be thankful! That made me confident enough to try harder and
harder each month, and after a couple months in steady growth, I started to see
a more significant average earning, and I was able today confidently, "Ok,
it took off!".
After that
initial relief and excitement of a new light, what came next? A big number of challenges and rewards that
came right after I overcome each challenge. The main source for getting work
has been an online platform where every client is able to rate the quality of
my completed projects, and the nature of the professional relationship we had.
That means a lot of things, a lot of new challenges that I didn't find working
in a company. First and foremost, I knew that I had to do my best in every
commission, no matter how big or small the gig was. But that in itself didn't
mean a change in my behavior, as I try my hardest to deliver the best quality within
my capabilities and in every situation. As the number of requests grew
exponentially, I faced the challenge of committing only to projects I was SURE
in the beginning I had the right skills to complete successfully, and to higher
standards of quality. To achieve that, I knew that I needed to continue
learning and improving my skills offsite, so most of the times I wasn't
working, I was researching youtube tutorials, drawing trainings, always keeping
up to date with what's new and good in illustration and design, besides other
activities that seemed helpful and o improve my artistry.
I also found
out, that which was particularly important, to resist to the temptation of
collecting as many contracts as possible, so I could make loads of money - I
just had to resist it, again for the sake quality, to keep my rating as high as
possible. Although even overloaded with
work and tight deadlines, I always keep in mind that I have to meet them, no
matter what, whilst controlling several projects at once. And that challenge
demanded something I consider very relevant and something I didn't found that
much of while working with other companies: a high level of discipline. Because
you have to accept you don't have a 9 to 5 job anymore, you're working with
clients all in different time zones, and your daily routine has to adapt to it.
Checking emails from 8 am to 12 am, being responsive at all times, and even if
you took that Sunday off to go to the beach, you have to make sure you'll have
internet access out in the wild, so you can reply your clients promptly. At
first I admit it was somewhat difficult to keep up with, however nowadays not
anymore: I see it as just one of my many routines, in order to maintain and
secure what I love to do the most: Illustration.
So after establishing all the procedures and work ethics,
what are the biggest rewards then of being a freelance illustrator? The first
one that immediately comes to mind, maybe the most important and satisfying, is
the variety of projects I found myself involved in. Each one requires a
different approach, a different style, a different procedure. That I feel
enriched me greatly as a professional. After several years on projects of very
different scopes, I feel I'm now an illustrator with a much wider visual
culture, work ethics and capable of leaving my clients very satisfied with the
work I have provided. As a result of all that, I have become much happier with my
profession and lifestyle.
But we all know that challenges and the need for self-improvement is always present, so I believe I've reached a point where I need to take a step forward, an even higher move towards quality. After some research , I found Toptal to be the best marketplace for online work, with the best clients, and the best freelancers. If I'm able to join the Toptal Freelance Visual Designers, that would be of the highest significance for my career, being able to deliver my best, and to raise the bar of quality in my work to the highest possible - I'm up for the challenge!
Jaime Raposo
www.jaimeraposo.com
jaime_raposo13@hotmail.com
But we all know that challenges and the need for self-improvement is always present, so I believe I've reached a point where I need to take a step forward, an even higher move towards quality. After some research , I found Toptal to be the best marketplace for online work, with the best clients, and the best freelancers. If I'm able to join the Toptal Freelance Visual Designers, that would be of the highest significance for my career, being able to deliver my best, and to raise the bar of quality in my work to the highest possible - I'm up for the challenge!
Jaime Raposo
www.jaimeraposo.com
jaime_raposo13@hotmail.com
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