How to Freelance Your Fanny Into Meaningful Work

Standard

Working for someone whose mission and attitude you love:  You can’t buy that kind of client.  You can’t bill for that kind of client.  You can’t plan that kind of client.

But to have that kind of client makes working a journey and a discovery, instead of a drag or a slog.

So how do you give yourself the gift of meaningful work? After all, you’re freelancing: YOU get to choose, right?

The truth is, sometimes yes and sometimes no.

When I began freelancing, my first client looked like a winner.  This woman was a pearl with an artistic side-business and an elderly-care front business, and she talked shop like family. She just wanted to invite everybody in to the little shindig of her life, and pals was the catchword.

My job was a slightly unorthodox mix of promotion and some on-site care for the owner of the client’s apartment complex.

The bastard-blend of work could have been a warning.  At this point in my career, I would call it a definite red flag.  If my job is not clear as new paint, and carefully relegated to writing, branding, coaching, or social media support, I have come to expect blurry boundaries, arguments about rate, and increasing expectations as to my involvement and responsibility without increased pay.

It was no red-flag at the time. I was also a little starving on the work-frontier.

At the end of it, I got physically ill.  But I also cut ties professionally and completely.  What I didn’t cut was lingering awkwardness, and the fact that I was renting from said client’s client.

Awkward, yes. Uncomfortable, yes. Predictable? Avoidable? Probably not.

NOT MEANINGFUL WORK. NOT HEALTHY WORK.

The one thing I could have changed was my attitude of scarcity: that desperation that says take anything now you won’t make it you may not deserve better.

My next gig was better.  It came about not through starving, but through a friendship and referral. All right, I was in dire straits.  But I didn’t approach it as a kid in dire straits; I approached it like a manager interviewing a new employee.  Did I fit with this company?  Were they teachable?  Did they want to work with me, not pal around?

Most importantly: Did I resonate with their mission and business practice?

Personally, I cannot do branding work for a client whose mission or voice clash with mine.  It may be a universal rule of freelancing that good work is like a good marriage — compatibility and willingness to trust and communicate — but it is definitely a personal freelance rule for me.

Did I resonate? Yes.  Was it a perfect fit?  No, we talked it out. Was their mission meaningful and authentic?  Yes.

Do I love exploring the content they promote, hawking their courses across social media, and teaching their staff how to navigate blogging?  Absolutely yes.

I could not have planned this gig if I tried.  What I could do, and did, was own my voice, own my boundaries, respect my value — and remain open to the next opportunity.

You may not be able to plan the work that feels like play, exploration, or relationship, but you can do these three things to get in its way:

1. Know what you do, do what you do, and take clients who want what you do.

2. CHOOSE. Don’t dive for a gig out of desperation or wont. There is no scarcity of work.  Scarcity is fear in disguise, and it’s an attitude.

3.  Continue to develop YOUR voice. Without self-development, you won’t know if you’ve connected with a client who resonates or not.  You won’t have the chance to choose. You’ll lose your voice in the slog of someone’s brand.

So how do you find that sweet-spot of meaningful work?  Look out for it, expect it, and no — you can’t plan it.  But enjoy it when you get it — one good gig leads to another, as they say; and having a good time (or enjoying a good job) means giving a good time (and doing a good job).

My Latest at Freelancers Union: 5 things successful freelancers do to keep their sanity

Standard

19577589-abstract-green-background-or-white-background-with-pastel-mint-green-color-on-vintage-grunge-backgro-Stock-Photo

“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”—Aristotle

The same can be said of sanity.

Check out these tips my latest at The Freelancers Union! You can bee on the ropes — and stay sane with these daily reminders:

The 5 Things Successful Freelancers Do To Keep Their Sanity.

Weird Works: Freelancing, Freelancers Union, BRANDING

Standard

 

Some of the best support I ever received in growing a business skips right along with THIS article (Why being weird works)

Be. YOU.

One hears the siren call of branding; the blast to put fangs into your FB posts; SEO and key words.  Don’t deviate!

The truth of the matter is, there’s balance.  Consistency is important.

But do you know what?  Being odd gets you clients; and being you is what you’re hired for — your audacity, your authenticity, your quirks and talents.  Communicate yourself well, with art and diligence and enthusiasm. But don’t  dumb down your highs, or spike your lows.  You don’t need to mainstream; you don’t need to slick.

Be an audacious son of a monkey.

Your words are important; and as important as your words is your voice.  Anyone can write empower; educate;  connect.  Who do those words connect to though?

To put it visually: Anyone can type a branding concept or word.  But what’s your font?  And where do you fling that beauty,  and with what heart or head or intent?

As the excellent freelancer does below, I shall quote Gervais: “People everywhere in the world will recognize and appreciate… innovation…. From my own experiences I’ve learned that quirky, different, fringe projects that may only be cult, often travel a lot better internationally. “

Travel yourself internationally.  Communicate well.  But don’t feel the compulsion to slick your metaphoric-hair down and stick to talking points.

If you’re an artist, a freelancer, a speaker, your audacity, your you is what gets you jobs.

It also gets you happy.


But who cares about that?  Pardon my flippancy.  Happiness also attracts clients.  So love what you do, and be yourself about it.

Imagery: Thanksgiving — Recall What’s Valuable

Standard

A reflection for the week.

Our work can directly affect the workings of our world.  Pope Francis cuts to the core when he addresses an attitude that puts utility before human life — we are useful because we are valuable, but our value is never based on our ability to be useful.

baby_born-336x256

Social Media Success, Self-Awareness Required

Standard

What happens when the language of social media, rather than connecting us, leaves us without self-awareness, and disconnected from our fellow human beings?

Social media are, by nature, simply new channels of communication.  Communication is about connection.  Connection cannot be made by one individual unless that individual has cultivated a sense of self, a personal interior connection, and an ability to be present.

Busy-ness wipes out presence, tends to ditch interior self-awareness, and puts productivity over relationship. Productivity may be what many are looking for on the digital media horizon.  But that productivity is a goal always out-of-reach if the reacher has lost his or her ability to reach — and connect — as a human being to a fellow human being.

Sherry Turkle, in a scintillating TED talk, sums up the social media language as a series of communicative “sips”.  Doesn’t that all add up to one good gulp? she’s asked.

The answer is no.

The medium is the message, and if we sacrifice our commitment to meaningful connection and communication to the god of productivity — the quick-shot of Tweet-speak; the Facebook status meant to hook — we not only lose a part of ourselves, we lose the key ingredient that makes any social media interaction valuable.  In the process, we lose-out on the monetary “value” (followers, ad revenue, business visibility) we’re so busy trying to produce.

“We can keep ourselves so busy, fill our lives with so many diversions, stuff our heads with so much knowledge, involve ourselves with so many people and cover so much ground that we never have time to probe the fearful and wonderful world within… By middle life most of us are accomplished fugitives from ourselves.

[…]

“The individual who has become a stranger to himself has lost the capacity for genuine self-renewal.”

 

This is from a book I’ve recently picked up. Concrete? Yes. Guide to social-media-know-how?  No. Guide to being able to recognize and produce meaningful content, extend a valid and engaging message, understand yourself?  Yes.

Gardener’s Self-Renewal touches on the precise pitfall of the medium of communication we use when utilizing Twitter, Facebook, or any other digital platform: it is the pitfall of “so much knowledge […] so many people […] so much ground” that by the time we’re finished, we’re not only strangers to ourselves, we’re strangers  still to every single one of those individuals we’ve tweeted; FB’ed, and pinned or ‘grammed.

“… we’re so busy being productive that we neglect to be present,” says Brainpickings. (I love Brainpickings, by the way. Please, patronize them.)

So true.

And if anything, good business, good relationships — and good social media — are all based on presence.  On our ability to nourish and engage in a relationship.

Sure, the medium is spat out in sips and sputters.  But human beings don’t change by nature, however we talk.  Look out for those who use it to create a whole and human message.  Look out for tweets like these (that really get you thinking). For blogs like Brainpickings (that put  body in the blog). For users that subvert the sip, and spin it out into sea.

Your business, your blog, your message will benefit.  Better yet, your capacity to communicate — to engage in friendship and fellowship — will.

We’re talking to humans, folks.  Be human. 

 

Recommended reading:

Self Renewal by John Gardener

“Alone Together” transcript (TED talk) by Sherry Turkle

On the Shortness of Life by Seneca

5 Key Social Media Actions Vital to Engagement

Standard

Vital means living, and if you invest in social media as a freelancer, or as a specialist for a business or brand, you want your content and audience alive.

Here are 5 strategies to keep the social media conversation going.  Apply to any platform, from Twitter to Facebook.  But use them daily, and switch them up.

1)  Share Followers Quandaries

Don’t just share your ideas or solutions!  Share your followers’ questions and problems with your whole audience.  Involve the community.  People love helping — and sharing one person’s problem gives you both a huge pool of potential solutions to use yourself, and engages your audience.  This adds up to shares, traffic, and brand identification.

2) Post Inspirational Quotes

Pick something meaningful. Share. Social media currency is sharing.  But, as Claire Mitchell, founder of The Girls Mean Business, says,”… it helps people, because when you’re sitting there in your house running this business and trying to juggle it with kids or other jobs, it’s a really lonely place to be sometimes […] people feel as though they’re not alone.”

3) Ask Questions 

Whether it’s about your latest product, a relevant current affair, or your followers’ taste in music, ask questions. If you have a food-based business, ask for favorite event-day recipes. If you’re in the clothing business, ask about strategies followers’ have used to get a tailored-look without visiting a tailor — or flattering designs-for-all figures.

Ask questions. 

4) Run a Caption Contest

Humor + Engagement = Perfect way to get your page out there, shared, commented on!

5) Have a Blog

You need a landing page for deeper content.  Start a blog.  Refer all social media back to your website and blog when possible, and tap into relevant content using tools like Feedly.com.

Finally, care about your audience.  This is social media.  Anthropologists watching the behavior of users and communication styles say we relate to our social media groups like a tribe.  We’re not selling.  When you take on a social media state, you’re supporting.

 

 

This Is Social Media: Are You Listening?

Standard

If you need to know anything about social media, this is it:  All social media is a conversation.

And a conversation with only one participant is a dead conversation. (Or a crazy dude on the corner, talking to himself.)

I have had client upon client stare at me blankly, in horror, when asked to begin tweeting, or posting on Facebook.  If you’re similarly horrified, or in a  social media rut, consider these three questions:

 

1) Why do I stay in a conversation?

2) Who do choose to talk to, and why?

3) When I’m having a conversation, don’t I expect to be listened to?

 

The last one is the most often overlooked by conversationalists, and new users of social media.  Whatever your community, and whomever your audience is, they’re part of a conversation.  Are you asking questions? Are you listening?

 A recent Business Insider article discussed the key coin for social media platforms, and it’s engagement.  Essentially, engagement means time-spent.  So next time you take to the social media hemisphere, remind yourself that you’re in a conversation: it goes both ways.

Engage.

When To Post: Timing IS Everything

Standard

So when is the top time to post?  Everyone knows content on social media is in one side, out the other in a blink.

How do you catch the attention of your audience?

Shoot it out on time.  For social media, this can be a wobbly target.  But overall, whatever platform you’re using, Buffer Social shows that engagement is 18% higher on Thursdays than any other day.  You’re also most likely to pin the attention of a social media rover between 9pm and 1am if you’re tweeting or retweeting.

On Facebook, you may just bet best on having 90 minutes of primetime once you post — and those minutes will have the most eyes on Hump Day through Thursday, and posted 10am to 3pm.  If you’re going to repost, try 6-7pm.  But don’t post more than twice.  Even if you’re not getting the reaction you’re looking for, over-posting is the surefire way to get labeled annoying and ignored.

But in the end, if you really want to fine-tune it: Gauge your own audience. Followerwonk, a Twitter analytics tool, can pin when your target followers are out and about.  Make that your tweet time.

Take the time to do the same and analyze  Facebook followers as well.

Small businesses, personal bloggers, and others may not have time to go in depth.  So here’s your takeaway in a nutshell (or a tweet):

Tweet a minimum of 5 times per day, and aim at the evening.

Post to Facebook at least 10 times per week, during 10-3pm timeframe.

Use your unique voice.  Repeat.

Last but not least, keep learning.  Watch for patterns.  Ask your audience questions. Aim to engage — and do it on time.  Timing, like they say, is everything. Your social media posts might be missing out by being tardy.