Previously I have written on how freelancing
seems at last to be working for me ,apart that is for the time last
year when I had no reliable working computer , and that is when you , unable to
earn money online since you cannot get online, wonder if indeed you should go
back to trying , regardless of health issues to get a job , with an employer
who pays you for turning up and doing it.
One of the most obvious differences of freelancing is that
certainly when starting out, income often has to be built up from several
sources and small jobs, rather than going to work for one employer. Many hours
will be spent not just doing the work and meeting deadlines, but looking for
the next job or more jobs to bump up your earnings in addition to the one you
are currently working on.
It might not sound ideal, I have friends and family who care
very much for my welfare but cannot rejoice at my saying I have work, because
they do not see freelancing as a real job.
With one elderly friend, I have to constantly reassure her by saying
that it’s a stop gap, just something better than nothing, that pays the bills
and I'm using it to get some work experience to get a real job. She feels so
strongly that it cannot be real work and longs to hear I have got a job where I
went for an interview in an office and I can answer 'yes ' to her question '
They do pay everything for you that they should …..? ‘Meaning tax and national
insurance, sickness pay and holiday pay. I admit I have told a few lies....
However, freelancing
matters and I believe
it will increasingly matter for older and or disabled workers. Denied sickness
benefits and with the decrease in the value of pensions and increase in the
state pension age , many are and will find themselves unable to do the job they
did, yet being forced by welfare reform to get a job. Freelancing is the way
to make a job....especially when nobody will give you one.
Do not be fooled though, freelancing does not mean that you
will find it easier to get work or that indeed you will get work. Many
freelancers just setting off are a long way from having a fully-fledged
business of their own, and so to start off may and many do, use freelance bid
sites where they bid for the jobs advertised. These sites are
good sources of work, many freelancers get all their work from them,
others use them until they have enough clients not to use
them and perhaps have built up a larger business, perhaps no longer
working from a desk in the spare bedroom or home office. The way to find these freelance
job boards is to Google lists of freelance job
boards and look through them to see what you fancy and then discover over
time which ones are most suitable for you. It is a case of trial and
error. Some freelance
boards are specialist boards for e.g. writers,
others are general with several types of job.
A point to remember when applying
for freelance work is that the same approach applies in some ways as
it does to applying for a job with an employer. Just because it is freelance
work, does not mean you will be offered it, there are as many, if not more
freelancers out there as there are job hunters and there is a wealth of advice
online about how to write and win bids, in the same way as there is loads of
advice about how to write a CV, apply for jobs and approach a job interview and
of course gradually you gain more confidence and experience at doing so. Also,
rather like networking to get a regular job , the more work you do and
complete, the better ratings on such sites you can build up, which can lead to
more work and actually being invited to submit bids for jobs because people
have seen your profile and
ratings .
Freelancing
does matter in the job hunting world and will become increasingly
significant to the workforce as people age and disabled people who once would
have received sickness and disability benefits are forced to work , as well as
being a very popular lifestyle choice for many. Freelancing
is a real job...and it matters
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