Wake Up Later



From friends who think I make easy money to my mother who (lovingly) admonishes me to get a real job, everybody seems to have their own idea of what freelancing is all about. Many of these ideas come from misconceptions of the freelancing life, and here are eight of the most popular:

1. Freelancers Only Have to Work a Little
Many folks assume that the real reason people begin freelancing is so that they can finally work their own hours and relax. This is not altogether true (hence it being on a list entitled "Eight Misconceptions About Freelancing"). Although it's true that I do "wake up later," it's only because I'm up until 4AM working on something or other that needs my attention. One day, I hope I can wake up later due to passive income streams, but for now, freelancing requires multiple hats and overhead. And yes, there are some days when I wonder if I made the right choice (but those days are still few compared to the days that I'm glad for my own schedule and the ability to cook large amounts of bacon at any time).

2. Freelancers Make Lots of Money
This misconception is more popular among people not in the website industry. They know a friend who's a freelance web designer and charges $70 an hour. Given a 40-hour work week, that's $10,000 a month! Right? Well, that's true if you could always fill 40 hours a week and only do billable work (and if you're the one freelancer who has accomplished this, then check a mirror because you actaully don't exist). The reality is, you're fortunate if half your hours are billable. Plus, you're usually paying more taxes (about double here in the States), often covering your own health insurance, and supplying your own retirement account. All in all, many freelancers actually make less than they could in a corporate world.

3. Freelancers Live Stress-Free Lives
When you're freelancing, you're not just enduring the stress of one job (whether that be designer, developer, or writer), but you're also dealing with the stress of every other job. This includes clients, finances, schedules, budgets, subcontractors, and many other issues, all while knowing that your paycheck is dependent on handling all of this.

4. Freelancers Have Few Future Career Outlets
The logic goes, if you're the only employee, there's no vertical career mobility. What this logic doesn't take into account is the fact that, unlike the corporate employee, the freelancer is the boss. Freelance your whole life? You could. Start your own firm? Why not. Build web apps or the next big idea? If you want. Plus, I've seen many freelancers get great offers from companies or startups looking for someone who can operate efficiently and effectively on their own.

5. Freelancers Live Paycheck to Paycheck
Unlike #2 (where outsiders believe that freelancers make a lot of money), this misconception is often assumed by people within the website industry. They may have had their share of freelance and found little money in it. So do freelancers live from paycheck to paycheck? My answer is "no more so than your normal corporate employee does." And actually, if a freelancer has been solo for any amount of time, chances are that they are pretty good at handling finances and keeping good tabs on invoices and mortgage bills. It's true that freelancers don't have that assured biweekly check, but it's not like they're waiting insecurely for random donations – after all, they are the ones sending the invoices and setting the payment terms.

6. Freelancers Get Socially Starved
If you know a freelancer who seems particularly introvertive, it's most likely because he or she chooses to be. The world is just too big and connected (thanks to the internet and the plentitude of social networks) for anyone to not have some social outlets. Work is not the only place to meet people nor do all your friends need to know what CSS stands for :-). And if you live near a decent sized city, there's bound to be a MeetUp group to your liking as well. Sure, we don't have the dynamics of having coworkers, but most of us find other ways to connect.

7. Freelancers Appreciate Any Work They Can Get
Work opportunities are good. But it seems that when you're a freelancer, all your friends will contact you with potential jobs from their sister, their uncle, and their orthodontist (I've had all three happen to me). They're very well-meaning, trying to help out with referrals, but very few of these ever pan out. Although a lot of my pro bono work comes from friends, the work that keeps me financially afloat usually comes from my client/professional network.

8. Freelancers Would Never Go Back to Corporate
Ahhh...the freelance life...where you have no boss, no worries, and the freedom to work on the most amazing projects in the world. Why would anyone ever go back to a corporate job? Well, for starters, maybe because that first sentence is not true. Although there are a lot of perks to freelancing that I love, it's by no means paradise, and there are some opportunities that only exist in larger companies. I've seen many freelancers go back to a corporate position that both gives them flexibility and allows them to be part of some pretty amazing things.


Subscribe to new articles (3-4 weekly) through RSS or get updates by email.





Community Comments


Sean Hodge






Joshua Clanton






Samuel






Oliver






Andre






Kevin






Ben






Samuel






Brett






Bijan






Nathan Larkin






Landon






Garth






Troy






Christine OKelly






Alex Pilafian






Samuel






Jay Kerr






Garth






sascha/hdrs






Buttons






bhad






Dave






Lindsey






Mike






Cedric Hohnstadt






Bala






Angie






seb






Samuel






EclecticWAHM






Fadern






Monique Briand






Steven






David Turner






rajeswar mohanty






boop






subwaysurfer






Mikko






Anna










Name:
Website:
Email:
Comment:
Verify Code:  
Image Validator



RSS Icon


Categories


Analytics

Blogging

Free Stuff

Freelance Lessons

Freelance Resources

Marketing

News

Online Business

SEO

Website Building



Weekly Web Stuff


Stuff from around the web that we found interesting this week.

The Amazing Holga
Learn about the Holga toy camera, the plastic, medium format camera that photographers love for its unpredictable, low fidelity images.

Free Photoshop Patterns
Usually when it comes to design material, "free" means "ugly." Here are some useful Photoshop patterns that are not.

30 Fonts and Their Usage
A solid list of serif and sans-serif fonts and their usefulness for all the "boring " tasks that designers face: books, small website type, newspapers, etc.

Free Web Services and Products
A large list of free services and downloads for multimedia, productivity, security, etc. You're bound to find a couple apps that look helpful.

Toy Soldiers
War photos using "toy soldiers, some newspaper, a lighter, and a bottle of Goldbaum."


Top Commenters


small business seo

lijfrente verzekering

Joomla Developer Perth

seo freelancer

Justin (Pusha)

Jason

Ilcho Vuchkov

Ramayadi

Leo

Just Another MouseHo




Power Host - Quality Web Hosting, 99% Uptime Guarantee, 30 Day Money Back Guarantee, 24/7 Live Support
Simple Marketing for Small Businesses and Freelancers
FlashDen
Freelance Rockstar
Work Smarter. Play Harder. Visit Put Things Off.
Advertise Here

Poll



Top Posts


10 Absolute "Nos!" for Freelancers

8 Web Design Mistakes That Developers Make

The Evolution of Websites: How 10 Popular Websites Have (And Have Not) Changed

6 Places that Flash Does Not Belong

8 Reasons to Redesign Your Blog

8 Common Misconceptions About Freelancers

Freelancing: Why or Why Not?

A Love Letter to Flash



Recent Interviews


Christine O'Kelly
Taking Risks
with Christine O'Kelly
Stop making excuses and start taking risks.
Brett Nyquist
Paid to Blog
with Skellie
Make money from blogging and a little audacity...
Brett Nyquist
Corporate Isn't So Bad
with Brett Nyquist
Baseball player turned freelancer turned corporate.
Fivestone Logo
I Sell WordPress
with Adriaan Pienaar
This WordPress Rockstar has mastered his niche.
Fivestone Logo
From Freelance to Firm
with Jason Locy
How to go beyond being a solo freelancer.