I made £500K+ from freelancing in the last 4 years without working all the time.

Here’s everything I learned.

A thread.
To answer the obvious first:

1. 95% profit
2. On my own, with a few project hires
3. Just freelancing, no other revenue streams

Onto the good stuff...
Unless you have years of specific expertise and career contacts, you won’t make big money from freelancing overnight.

Don’t let anyone sell you this dream.

My first £100K year came after 7 in business.
The only freelancing “growth hack” you’ll ever need:

Narrow your focus and stick around.
Questions to ask yourself to help narrow your focus:

- Who do I like working with?
- What do I do better than most?
- What feels like fun to me and work to others?
- What can I do for a long time?
- Where do I want to take this eventually?
It’s not risky to sell a service that isn’t for everyone.

It’s smart.
Stop being everything for everyone as soon as you can.
5 ways to stick around in freelancing:

- Do a good job
- Do a good job
- Do a good job
- Do a good job
- Do, a good job
Now that I’ve made that clear...

- Keep marketing even when you’re busy
- Don’t burn bridges with good people
- Be wary of people with time to waste yours
You’ll only be able to stick around by doing a good job.

Reputation spreads exponentially.

Leave a positive impression always.
Doing free work on the promise of paid work rarely works out.

Work for free for yourself to build enough reputation so that “clients” never ask you.
How to work for free for yourself:

- Self-initiate projects that prove the results of the service you want to sell
- Write articles and tutorials that make your expertise obvious
- Build an audience of connections that see you as an authority by helping people
(Work quality + service quality) * marketing ability = freelance potential
You can start freelancing without having had a job doing what you’re selling.

It’s hard at the start, but it forces you to fend for yourself.

And you’ll pick up skills that are harder to acquire when you’re employed.
Becoming a freelancer means becoming a businessperson.

If you don’t want:

- Market yourself
- Price your work
- Sell your services

Get a job.
Freelancing helps you confront things that scare you.

Want to make money this month?

Well you better take those calls.
You can’t be picky until you have options.

Take your first client to pay the bills.

Take your next client to increase your leverage.
Raise your prices regularly and experiment like hell.
Asking someone else, “What would you charge for this?” isn’t always as useful as you think.

Take advice, sure. But remember, they aren’t you and you aren’t them.

You’ll have to do some testing in the real world.
Pricing is 50% confidence in your own ability and 50% credibility of your ability to others.
Give people a reason to see you as different:

- Price
- Offer
- Client type
- Service type
- Business type
- Specific expertise
- Complimentary skills
If there’s no obvious difference between hiring you and the next best option, prospects will make their decision on price.
Not everyone wants to go with the cheapest freelancer.

Some people want to go with the most expensive.
You’ll want more money until you want more time.
After a point, finding where “enough” becomes your most important focus.

There’s always more money to make, there’s never more time to make.
It’s OK to stop growing your business for a while to enjoy your life.
Know when you work best and protect this time at all costs.

You probably need less than as you think.
3-4 hours of focused work is plenty.
Know the downsides of relinquishing your autonomy.

Logging hours for clients won’t give you freedom.
Accept that your days won’t always go to plan.

Embrace a semi-flexible routine to help you cope:

- Set yourself a skeleton schedule
- Add trap door slots for the unforeseen
- When it goes wrong, take it in your stride and get back on it tomorrow
Give yourself multiple calendar slots to do non-negotiable things.

For example:

If you want to work out 3 times per week, give yourself 5 opportunities.
Exercise is everything.

A healthy body is a healthy mind is a healthy person is a healthy business.
Talk to your family to help you to help them.

Freelance flexibility is a blessing and a curse.

Set boundaries on both sides of the work/life balance.
Don’t half-arse anything.

If you’re working, you’re working.

If you’re not working, you’re not working.

Make the most of everyone’s time by being fully present.
You can work less the longer you freelance because:

1. Your skills improve
2. You work quicker
3. You solve similar problems for similar people
4. You develop systems
5. You command higher prices

The long-game is the smart game.
Use your experience to work less.
Freelancing is easier when you don’t need the work.

You need to be able to walk away from projects.

Get here by working on generating more leads than you can handle.
How to generate more leads than you can handle:

- Have a personal website with good SEO
- Write blog posts answering your ideal clients’ problems
- Share your knowledge on social media and in communities for free
- Ensure everyone you work with wants to work with you again
Make marketing part of your job, not an afterthought.
Don’t sell all of your best time to clients.

Give yourself time to work on your own business or you’ll struggle to progress.
Learn to take rejection in your stride.

It’ll happen a lot.
Freelancing is personal until you don’t get the job.
Your freelance career starts when your mindset switches.

From:

“I need the client.”

To:

“The client needs me.”
Being able to enter a negotiation and be happy with either outcome is when the whole game changes.

Learn marketing deeply.
Make yourself known for something.
When you have authority, you have leverage.

When you have leverage, you have optionality.

When you have optionality, you have impartiality.

And when you don’t mind how talks turn out one way or another, you can lead a profitable freelance career without working all the time.
Do your utmost for every client and make sure there’s another one right around the corner.
You can make good money and have a life.

In the last 4 years we:

- Travelled regularly (pre-COVID)
- Converted a house
- Renovated a house
- Got married
- Had a child

All meant significant time off for me.

It doesn't have to be a constant grind.

instagram.com/tom_hirst/
You don't have to sit in your office all day to make it work.

Not sitting in your office all day is what makes it work.
When you love what you do, it's easy to overdo it.

Teach yourself balance by implementing hard-stops.

For example:

I won't work past 18:00 because that's when I cook dinner.

Non-negotiable.
It's not about working hard or smart.

It's about working hard until you can work smart too.

Anyone with anything worth having has worked hard at some point.

Be prepared to do both.
A freelancer's business will always blur into a freelancer's life.

You can't avoid it completely, but you can train yourself to let go:

- Create mental separation
- Create physical separation

Gain the habit of not doing work things in life time.
Creating physical separation:

"My desk is where I work."

Creating mental separation:

"When I'm not at my desk, I don't owe my business."
Discover how + when you work best.

Remember you're more than your business.

Listen to your mind and body.

Know what's important.

Work with your family.

Play to your strengths.

Have fun.

Give yourself the best chance in business and in life.

Because each helps the other.
If you want to learn more from my freelance career:

- 10 steps to get you ahead (free): tomhir.st/10-steps
- How to get paid what you're worth: tomhir.st/pfp
- How to gain leads, revenue and opportunity from your personal website: tomhir.st/pwp

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More from @tom_hirst

3 Mar
ANNOUNCEMENT:

I’m excited to announce the launch of my new headless @WordPress business, @rtsagency!
@rtsagency is me and my small team of friends with big talent.

We make websites, eCommerce stores & apps for serious business on WordPress.

Search-loved & conversion-focused technical WordPress work is our speciality.
Smart business looking to get ahead of your competition?

Agency with clients on WordPress searching for a partner to make you look good?

We want to work with you!

runtheshow.agency
Read 8 tweets
9 Feb
How your personal website can change your life.

Everything I've learned.

A thread.
Since my early teens, I’ve loved creating websites.

From Geocities back then to WordPress + JavaScript now;

I've grown up with my personal website.
From the first time I heard our 56K modem screech, I was hooked on the internet.

I needed to learn how to build websites, so I enrolled in an afterschool course,

And picked up enough HTML to create version 1 of tomhirst[dot]com.
Read 38 tweets
21 Jan
Marketing for freelancers.

Everything I’ve learned.

A thread.
If you don’t take marketing seriously,

Prepare for constant battle.
Good marketing makes everything easier.

- Getting clients
- Pricing projects
- Negotiation

All the hard stuff, made easier.
Read 45 tweets
20 Jan
This year, I'm in control of my time.

Meaning:

I can use all of it to make "bets" with.

I can work for money if I want.

Or I can do stuff that's primarily fun, interesting and fulfilling instead.

It's freeing, yet I feel less productive.

It's a strange transition.
You're not always as in control as you think as a freelancer.

When you need the money and/or sign long-term agreements, control is a facade.

You take the project because the bills need paying.

You sign the deal because it brings security.

At a cost of your autonomy.
In one light, having decisions made for you is easier.

"I'm working for this client today, cool."

Being self-motivated is a key trait of independent workers.

It's an even bigger key trait of people with time.
Read 6 tweets
5 Jan
Here we go!

I'm creating and launching a course this month.

And I'll be building everything in public:

- Strategy
- Time invested
- Revenue figures

All documented in this thread.

So far, I've made $2,592 in pre-sales.

The course: tomhir.st/th-pwp

Follow along...
Backstory:

Last year, I entered the creator space to find fulfilment and add another income stream to my portfolio.

I made a note named "Product Ideas" and jotted a few down.

One was my favourite:

Teaching independent workers how to create opportunity through their websites.
I've been using my personal website to drive interest in my freelance services for a long time.

The leads it collects provide fuel for six-figures' worth of work yearly.

My content brings interesting opportunities my way.

And I've monetised with a coaching programme too.
Read 38 tweets
29 Dec 20
Good things happen when you care less and do more.
Example 1:

I didn't have much interest in my freelance web development services,

Until I stopped worrying about not being able to code perfectly,

And started figuring things out along the way.
Example 2:

I didn't land high-ticket work,

Until I stopped worrying where my next project was coming from,

And started to implement a pipeline of opportunity for myself.
Read 7 tweets

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