u/Interesting_Story338

What's the one change that actually leveled up your freelancing?

Been thinking back on the stuff that actually moved the needle for me vs. the stuff I thought would.

Honestly, getting better at the craft mattered way less than I expected. The things that changed my income and my stress levels were mostly unglamorous: saying no to bad-fit clients earlier, charging deposits, not negotiating against myself on price, and tightening up how I ran projects.

The biggest single one for me was fixing how I start with a client. I used to get the "yes" and dive straight in, then realize halfway through I never nailed down what "done" looked like or who actually had final approval. Once I made myself get all that sorted up front before touching the work, projects stopped stalling and — weirdly — clients seemed to trust me more. Felt less like a freelancer, more like an actual studio.

Curious what it was for other people. What's the one habit, boundary, or system that made freelancing noticeably better for you? Always looking to steal good ideas.

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u/Interesting_Story338 — 3 days ago
▲ 5 r/founder+1 crossposts

Founders, startups and operators, what's your biggest operational problem after Launch?

Currently doing a market research on what operational problem founders and operators go through in their early stage of growing their startups, what problem do you see yourself facing frequently in early stage?

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u/H-Factor00 — 4 days ago