The 10 Biggest Mistakes Freelancers Make, and How to Avoid Them




No freelancer is perfect — not me, not you, not even the best of us. We all make mistakes, all the time, and if we’re smart, we learn from them.

Some mistakes, however, are more crucial than others, and if we can correct or avoid those mistakes, we’ll survive. We’ll still make other mistakes, but they won’t hurt as much.

Let’s take a look at some of the most essential mistakes that freelancers, new and old, often make, and how to avoid them.

Missing deadlines. I wrote more on this topic in this post, but basically, your ability to put out quality work and meet deadlines is what makes your reputation. And as a freelancer, your reputation is all you have. If you miss deadlines too often, you will soon see your clients going elsewhere. How to avoid: Make deadlines one of your top two priorities (along with putting out great work), overestimate how long it will take you, break the project into smaller steps, and be accountable every step of the way.

Charging too little. New freelancers, especially, undervalue themselves and charge less than they’re worth. That’s OK if you’re just breaking into the business, and don’t have any previous work or reputation to point to. But once you’ve got some stellar work under your belt, don’t be afraid to ask what you’re worth, otherwise you are selling yourself short. And you’ll be working too much just to pay the bills. (See this article for more.) How to avoid: It’s good to find out what the market avergage is, and charge a little more. This tells clients that you’re good. A good way to do the math is to figure out how much you want to make, and how many hours you realistically plan to work. Then charge based on those numbers.

Lack of preliminary research. This is research before making your pitch, not before completing the assignment. Often a freelancer will contact a potential client and make a pitch, without really understanding the client or his needs, and without knowing how this project will add value to the client. This approach will get you very little business. How to avoid: Research the client thoroughly before making contact. The Internet is a great way to do that, of course. Know what the client does, the client’s market, what the client’s goals are (in general), and figure out how you can help the client meet those goals. How will you add value? Direct your pitch at those issues.

Choosing the wrong clients. The client-freelancer relationship is an important one, and there are many issues that can make a client the wrong client, or the right client, for you. Those include the market they’re in, they’re working style, how difficult they are, how likely they are to pay your rate, how much work they require, their ability to pay on time without hassle, and more. If you choose the wrong client, you will make less money, be unhappy, and work more. How to avoid: Select clients carefully. Again, research them, talk to other freelancers who’ve worked for them. When contacting a client, think of it as a two-way interview — they are trying to decide if you’re right for them, but you should also be trying to decide if they are right for you. Do your first assignment or three on a trial basis, to see how things work out. Every now and then, evaluate your clients to see if they’re worth the trouble.

Getting too personal. It’s good to be friendly with a client, but keep it professional. You don’t want to be best friends. You shouldn’t be too formal, either, but if you become personal, two things could happen: 1) one of you could get hurt or angry at the other based on a business decision; or 2) the client might think you’re unprofessional. Either one is bad for business. How to avoid: Start any correspondence on a formal basis, and then get friendlier depending on how the client handles communication. Don’t be afraid to be friendly, but at the same time, don’t go beyond business, and don’t cross the line into unprofessionalism.

Letting off steam. If there is a problem with a client, some freelancers have a tendency to vent their frustration — at the client. For example, if an editor decides not to run my article, I might show my frustration and displeasure in a very angry way. This is bad. It will harm your professional reputation, both with this client and with future clients. And it will lead to decreased business over time, if you continue this mistake. How to avoid: If there is a problem with a client, and you are angry or frustrated, do not communicate right away. Let your steam off some other way, through talking to a friend, through exercise, through eating a carton of ice cream. But don’t do it at your client, or anyone else in your professional world. Bite your tongue. Then, when you’ve calmed down, communicate with your client in a non-emotional, professional manner — preferably in a positive way, but clearly, so that future problems can be avoided.

Not proposing a follow-up idea. Often a freelancer will complete an assignment, and then move on to an assignment with another client. Perhaps the freelancer hopes that the assignment that he completed was so amazing, the client will be knocking down his door the next day. Unfortunately, that often doesn’t happen. If you don’t provide the basis of future business, you might not see it. How to avoid: when you complete an assignment, propose a follow-up idea for future work. If you don’t hear back, follow up.

Not having multiple income streams. Relying on one or two clients is always a bad idea. If your main client drops you, or reduces his freelancer budget, or goes out of business, you’re out of luck. And now you can’t pay your bills. How to avoid: Always have multiple income streams. You might start with one freelance client (we all do in the beginning), but don’t rely on that as your primary source of income until you’ve added more clients. And if you can get other sources of income streams (a full- or part-time job, another business, your spouse’s income, advertising on a blog, selling a product, Amway), you should work hard to do so. It will make your income much more stable and reliable.

Allowing yourself to slack. Let’s face it: some days, we don’t feel like working. And that’s fine, if we plan for that flexibility, and make up for it on other days. But too many days of slacking, and soon you aren’t getting any income. And you’re missing deadlines. Not good. How to avoid: It’s fine to give yourself flexibility, so that you can work when you feel productive, but if you have deadlines to meet, don’t let yourself slack off. Push yourself to meet the deadline, and work in bursts to motivate yourself.

Failing to be yourself. Often we take work because we need the income, but it doesn’t align with who we are. And we feel awful about it, and slowly we begin to hate ourselves. Until we no longer want to do the work. How to avoid: Seek, from the beginning, to find work that aligns with your values, that allows you to be who you are. Being fake and dishonest, to others and to yourself, gets you nowhere. Be sincere in your interactions with others, and don’t be afraid to say no to stuff that doesn’t fit who you are. Always strive to find work you love.

PG

Leo Babauta has been a reporter, editor, speech writer and freelance writer for the last 17 years. Leo writes for numerous blogs notably including LifeHack.org and his own blog about simple productivity, Zen Habits.net.


  1. PG henry

    Undercharging is definitely one of the issue faced by plenty of freelancer. You would save yourself plenty of grief and regret if you just charge what you feel you are worth and you be surprised when the clients reply with an understanding of your rates:)

  2. PG Jens

    I can relate to the fourth one. But how can I refuse a client on a professional and a gentle way? I really don’t know how to refuse a client that doesn’t fit for me, please help!

  3. PG Ali

    “a full- or part-time job, another business, your spouse’s income, advertising on a blog, selling a product, Amway”

    LOL, Amway. The. Best. Advice. Ever!

  4. PG Josh

    Excellent advice. Though I wonder if starting as a freelancer and charging a little more than the average would still land you work… :)

    Also, “they’re working style” should be their…

  5. PG Leo

    Lol … glad you liked that one, Ali. :)

    @Jens: First, I would find other clients that work better before firing the client(s) that aren’t working well for you. Second, once you’ve done that, fire the problematic client(s). Write a polite and regretful email, citing one or more of the following reasons:

    * too many projects, have to cut back
    * going in a different direction with your work
    * cutting back on your work, and only taking jobs that pay above $___ per hour (use a figure you know they won’t pay)

    I’m sure you could think of other reasons — the more true and sincere they are, the better.

    The key is to be polite, be regretful, and ask for their understanding.

  6. PG Jens

    Thank you for the help! Maybe you guys should write an article about client communication or something!

  7. PG Satish

    (Jen: Refuse with assistance – connect them with someone you trust and feel confident referring them to, so that even though you haven’t been able to do anything yourself, through your network of freelancers you’ve still helped them get what they’re looking for).

    Awesome summary on common mistakes guys, lots of relevant points there that I’m finding lots of lovely connections to myself.

  8. PG Paul

    Undercharging was my biggest issue at first. It only took a couple of clients (and a few bills) however before I had realized the error in my ways.

  9. PG jb

    How you refuse work can really depend on the situation.

    I had a prospective client referred by a good friend. The project was large – complete branding + a large e-commerce site with 3 or 4 sister sites. After a few meetings with the client – we broke up the work and started on the branding. 2/3 of the way through the logo design process I knew the client relationship wouldn’t work for me. The client was constantly ‘checking in’ on the status of work well before any promised deadlines – and the direction they wanted to take their brand was off to say the least. When they were satisfied with their logo – I provided them with all the promised files and final invoice, and simply told them that I would no longer like to work for them and to find someone else to finish up their projects. I haven’t heard from them since.

    Another client, a media firm outsourcing to more than one freelancer, that I had freelanced for many times, offered a flat amount for 4 logo concepts. If any of my concepts were chosen, I would have to provide changes, edits and finalizations for the offered flat amount – that was considerably lower than my normal rate. I politely refused this work, citing the issues I had with the offer directly. This client relationship is still in good standing, and I continue to get consistent work from this firm.

  10. PG Mary Emma Allen

    Great tips for freelancers…and people in other businesses, too.

  11. PG Jeff

    “It’s good to find out what the market avergage is, and charge a little more. This tells clients that you’re good.”

    That’s a little bit hard to believe actually. If you have nothing in your portfolio, it will be hard to convince the client that you’re actually good.

  12. PG Andrei Potorac

    Really good article. Thank you!

  13. PG Carmen Ruiz

    The truth and nothing but the truth. Love this post. I have stepped at least once in each one of the pooints. Luckly I have learned, but still make some mistakes.
    The last point hits me! I’ll explain. I said yes to a proyect that is a real pain. I always find something else to do but this damm web design. And it is because I don’t like the theme, the philosphy behind the proyect… anything.
    It was my mistake because I knew that from the very beggining and now I’m stuck in that.
    Why I said yes? The “client” is a friend. Another BIG MISTAKE.

    I guess we could add to that list that: Do not take projects from friends or you may have a problem in you friendship.

  14. PG Jeff

    “I guess we could add to that list that: Do not take projects from friends or you may have a problem in you friendship.”

    You are completely right. I should have told my friend that I wanted to make his mum’s website. And now I’ve been waiting for over a month for him to send me the contents.

  15. PG Budi S

    Very good article …
    Keep make good article like this …
    I like it …

  16. PG vdash

    Missing deadlines is not the big problem.

    The big problem is not letting the client know you’re going to miss the deadline as soon as you know you’re likely to miss it.

    If an event comes up that may affect your deadline, let them know. For example, each day of an illness, let them know. Also let them know how available you’ll be (i.e. checking email periodcally, but mostly in bed). They have employees and children, they know that people get sick. Communicate.

  17. PG BrokenCircle

    I gave up a professorship to do freelance work as a literary coach and restaurant consultant and I would like to point out that rates do vary sometimes you need to undercut yourself to gain a good client base, you build those clients up and as they grow your price grows.

    I can charge $500 at a restaurant that originally paid me $25, I can charge 8k a week to Sony or Texas Instruments but when I started out doing the exact same work I was grateful to get $1800 a month.

    Sometimes under cutting yourself is a good method for establishing repeat customers.

  18. PG Steve

    I couldn’t have said it better myself. I might have titled it “The 10 Biggest Mistakes You Can Make With Your Customers”, though.

  19. PG Design by Shycon

    Great post. The deadline issue is incredibly important. Its probably the one thing they teach you in college that must take with you into the rest of your life.

  20. PG Kristie

    Great tips! Choosing the right or wrong client can be a problem for people in all sorts of businesses. Sometimes client problems can totally mitigate any benefit (even financial) that you get from doing business with them.

  21. PG Chuck Brown

    I would add two further thoughts:

    1. know who you are, tell people who you are: there’s a tendency among freelancers to believe they can do it all…because usually they can, to some degree. but it helps people to see you a certain way when you definte yourself that way. don’t be afraid to define yourself within narrow boundaries…by what you specialize in…not with every single thing you’re capable of. that’s your public face.

    2. on a private level, don’t be afraid to hire in another freelancer to do things for you when it means that they will get done more quickly and possibly better than you can do them for yourself. don’t waste time tinkering…searching for solutions. develop a good support network and trust those people to get you through. use your time wisely.

  22. PG MHoover

    Thanks a lot for article…. I have some clients (first few clients) that still pay the same rate I charged when I started :( and not sure how to ask them to pay current rate…

    On the other side, I’ve done work for quite a few friends and it’s been pretty good, the bad things is the clients they recommend me to… aren’t so good on timeline nor payment process.

  23. PG Samantha

    Great advice for me who’s just now starting out.
    Thanks!

  24. PG Andy

    I wrote on this very topic a few weeks ago with my 5 (+ a bonus one) Surefire Ways to Screw Up As A Freelancer blog entry at http://www.freelancelocaltech.com/blog/archives/15 . There are a few you didn’t include. I’m sure there are more ways to really screw up a beautiful client relationship that we didn’t think of!

  25. PG Kevin M. Scarbrough

    The biggest mistake I see with fellow freelancers is taking on projects or clients they cannot / will not / do not want to do, for the money. When you are your own boss, you have to trust your gut.

  26. PG iole

    I enjoy your entry here and I will take more time to visit here again. I will bookmark you here. Thanx!

  27. PG jgv

    I think the number one is definitely charging too little. In an earlier comment Leo mentioned taking on too many projects at one time… I think thats definitely my number two. All in all great article and great advice, especially in the last sentence.

  28. PG Richard

    Great info on Freelancer, I agree some take on to much.

  29. PG Jermayn Parker

    Charging is definitely the big one for me

  30. PG Ninja

    It’s good to be friendly with a client, but keep it professional. – That is so true, its always best to keep focused on the task at hand anyway. Talking about your personal issues can sometimes make your clients uncomfortable. Best to keep it lite and stick to business!

  31. PG Justin

    I can think of a few good ways to turn down work…

    I’m a consultant, and a lot of the time, because my resume has a few buzzwords, even though I try to keep them to an absolute minimum, I frequently get offered work that I don’t want anything to do with. My response is usually quite simple:
    “Assignment X seems interesting, but it’s not what I want to focus on. I’m more interested in Y. If you have anything that better suits my skills, please don’t hesitate to give me a call back.”

    Also, if you can find any reasonable and truthful way to explain why the project you’re being offered isn’t in your particular niche, use it. (“I’m not familiar with your industry.” “I tend to focus on [automotive/entertainment/non-profit/etc] projects”.)

    Another one is to confess that you might not be the best person for the job — even if you think you are! Turn this around to imply that doing the potential client a favour:
    “Honestly, I don’t think I’m the right [guy/gal] for the job — but I’d like to refer you to someone who I think might be a better fit for what you’re looking for.”

    Being graceful about declining work, being helpful in placing a competent individual into the project, and pointing out that you only have the client’s best interests in mind is a sure-fire way to be first in line for new projects.

  32. PG Chris

    Isn’t that the stuff that one learns along the way, the hard way? The struggle to find that stuff out is also worth it. IMO

  33. PG Chris

    MHoover, i had the same, then i decided to do it anyway. And guess what, all my clients stayed! If they want to be a cheapskate you don’t want those clients anyway. They must choose you for your work and quality, the rates come after that.

  34. PG dt

    If I may humbly add, another big mistake is:
    Giving in to your client. This can include many issues such as doing too many free reiterations, giving in to client wishes, letting the client design for you. By doing so you might sacrifice your design intent. At the end of the day though this has to come with a balance between keeping your client happy and your work good.

  35. PG Steve

    @MHoover: A good way to increase your rates for exhisting customers is to send an email or letter (or include in your next bill to them) stating that your rates have increased. However, due to your long-standing relationship with them (or your appreciation of their business or whatever), you will give them an additional 3 months (or however long) at your old rate. Be sure to include the savings somehow.

    That way, you can increase their rates in a few months, and not only will they not be upset, but they’ll actually be appreciative and feel special, because you’re looking out for them and saving them money. I never cease to be amazed at how understanding customers and clients can be, no matter what business you’re in.

  36. PG alterna180

    i believe the most important thing missing from this list:
    SPEC WORK.

    avoid at all costs!

  37. PG Kevin M. Scarbrough

    Going off of what Justin said earlier, if you can’t / won’t / don’t want a client who comes to you, give them the name of someone you think can / will help them.

    I cannot stress this highly enough.

    You will remain in the mind of the client (which, even if you don’t do what they are doing now, is a good thing because they can become a resource for your own marketing), and you will become a benefit to the person who you referred to (pending the job goes through).

    I design and I illustrate, I don’t program or shoot photos (professionally). But if someone comes to me and needs either of those done, or needs a bit of metal working or a bit of wood working, I know where they can find it. And vice versa.

    If you want to be successful, expand your network to be as broad as possible.

  38. PG MHoover

    Very true Chris…thanks!

    This article has been shaking thoughts…now just have to put them on practice…

  39. PG Dutra

    Refusing clients is one of the advantages of freelance work. A hired employee very rarely can refuse a task. Don’t turn an advantage into a problem. You just say you are busy with other project. This project might be cleaning the oven or visiting your grandma. The client doesn’t need to know the details.

  40. PG 3kolone

    mistake #11.
    keeping regular job and working freelance almost full time :-)

  41. PG Peter Ivanov

    good article
    my opinion is that companies from India outsource project for very little money and in this way thy underbid all the outsource market

  42. PG Brad V.

    Like others have commented, I think undercharging is perhaps the biggest mistake a freelancer can make when starting out. It’s just as bad as overcharging, in my opinion.

    When you undercharge for your services, people will wonder just how good you really are. That old saying “you get what you pay for” plays a big part in this as well. Undercharging also screams “I’m an amateur”! It also cheapens the work for the rest of us.

  43. PG jfletch

    Re.: Undercharging. Your hourly rate says a lot about you. If you are just starting out, cite a good professional hourly rate and then charge them for fewer hours (you’re fast). You get them used to your hourly charge and then raise the number of hours you bill them as you get more established and can justify the additional time (even if only in your mind). They will think you are more established because you charge a more professional rate.

  44. PG David [at] SlowDownF

    “Failing to be yourself.” – Amen to that! We all, at times, are faced with decisions as to what direction our business should take. When we’re not authentic, we’re more prone to letting clients and potential clients define who we are and where we’ll go next.

  45. PG Zach@zacheverson.com

    Great advice about charging too little. I’ve increased my rate five times since I started freelancing, but because of existing contracts, I’m still charging my original rate to my older clients.

  46. PG E.T.Cook

    The single bit of advice that I give everyone that is starting to freelance is to not short-change themselves, or dilute their worth by accepting every project that comes through, regardless of size or monetary value. Many individuals start off by accepting everything, because they are eager to get as much behind their belt, and on their portfolio as they can.

    The fact is though, that is the smallest projects, that pay the least, and have the least margin, are typically the ones that are the most work, and are the worst clients to work with. Spend that time and resource selling yourself to bigger clients, that are looking for someone of your talents and skillsets.

  47. PG ebrown

    For many freelancers starting out billable time can be hard to judge — what is valid and what is not valid. I also found a Top Ten Reasons for Underbilling that is humorous.
    Keep up the good work! -ebrown

  48. PG DJ AMAZE

    I printed this one out. Very informative article

  49. PG Ta4ka

    That’s very cool

  50. PG max-x

    I thank this wonderful article

  51. PG ETEQ

    Thank you for great advices. Where do you all find your freelance jobs? I recommend scoping out http://www.eTEQ.com Thanks. eTEQ admin

  52. PG James O'Kelly

    Good points. Having freelanced for about 4 years after 7 years of corporate jobs I went through all of those :D Now I run a successful consultancy and make none of them.

    Keep in mind that if you price yourself correctly you will also price out the clients that you DONT want to deal with.

    In fact, add one more to the list:

    Never be afraid to fire your client for taking up too much of your time, giving you too much shit, or not paying their bills. They are taking up room, preventing you from getting a client who trusts your judgment as the expert and wants to pay you well.

  53. PG fivekitten

    I enjoyed reading this. (I know I have to quit this one job and I’m agonizing over it.) I’ve only been freelancing a little over a year. I’ve found taking multiple clients (“multiple streams of income”) always results in my not being able to get anyone’s work done on time. I have a habit of over-estimating myself and I NEED to stop that! So I’m thinking one or two clients would be a good thing..and if their work runs out..it’s easy enough to go on a freelance website and find more…going to read more of your articles..very nice…

  54. PG dmaza

    Great Post, thanks for the tips.

  55. PG Noreen

    Have you ever refused a freelance project? If so, how were you tactful in doing this?

  56. PG Ari Lestariono

    I agree at the point of don’t be to cheap, but to be honest there is no scale to qualify your grades as a freelancer.

  57. PG Billy Kirsch

    I have a hard time charging enough, but experience is teaching me I need to not undervalue my services. Great points here, thanks for the post.

  58. PG Erwin

    Nice read. I think choosing the right client is always a though one, since you can only discover the type you are dealing with when you are further in the process. Even when you’ve got years of experience …

  59. PG Rozer Art

    Very nice article.

    Probably there isn’t freelancer that didn’t smile while reading this list, because he remember some of this mistakes in his career.

  60. PG ASHIS CHATTERJEE

    ABSOLUTELY PERFECT PIECE OF GENUINE ADVICE .

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