K
K
KEESMI2021-11-06 23:10:11
Freelance
KEESMI, 2021-11-06 23:10:11

Is it worth it to start your “career” with freelancing?

Hello, I am a young specialist who graduated this year and has been trying to find a job for 4 months. All this time I thought about working as a freelancer, because it is quite convenient to work from home, while gaining experience and some projects in my portfolio. But this idea stopped at the place of the idea, due to lack of information about the threshold of entry into this field of activity. I tried to find at least some information, but all in vain, I climbed several sites with freelance and did not understand whether it was worth starting with this. He graduated from the specialty "Computer systems and complexes", it includes almost all areas of activity one way or another related to IT, on freelance I would like to do projects related to programming in Java or C ++, as well as front-end and back-end sites.

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

8 answer(s)
S
Sergey Arsentiev, 2021-11-07
@moytop

If there is even the slightest opportunity to get a stationary job (you don’t live in a village and don’t plan to go there in the near future, etc.), then you should definitely try to do it. You won’t be able to gain any experience in freelancing, only bumps from clients.
Freelancing usually works:
1) who has no way out. for food.
2) accomplished cool specialists, tired of the bosses and the city, sitting on the ocean. for big bucks.
3) trying to make a "career" there. for food and feedback.
4) who works for an uncle, but at the same time manages to take small orders and earn extra money on freelance. this seems to me the most reasonable way, in the future, the possibility of an airbag flickers if the uncle sends or, on the contrary, the exchange throws it out.

C
C15H22N6O5S, 2021-11-09
@C15H22N6O5S

You don't quite understand how it works. Freelancing does not start a career. It is "finished" there. This is when you are already an accomplished specialist, you have a [commercial] real estate in Moscow, Sochi. You live on the rental income from these and other investments. And freelancing is like that, "for the soul" you sit on the shore, you code only what you want and when you want, for a "tip".

R
Ronald McDonald, 2021-11-06
@Zoominger

this year he graduated from his studies, for 4 months trying to find a job.

Let me guess - cursives?
On the topic of the question: no one bothers to try, of course. Another thing is that the chances are extremely small, given the fact that there are many thousands like you.
But you can try.

M
Masha, 2021-11-10
@marusseo

Freelancing is hard for beginners with no experience.
Many give up this idea after the first attempts.
It is better to do an internship in a team or get a job as an outsourced junior. There are more and more remote vacancies every day.
Gain experience and you can swim freely, if the desire does not disappear.
Here are tips for beginners

P
Puma Thailand, 2021-11-07
@opium

You have tough self-discipline and high self-learning freelancing is your way

J
Julia Bedrosova, 2021-11-08
@Bedrosova

It's like in a joke:
- What have you been doing for the last 3 years?
- Thinking about your business.
4 months to think? In freelancing, you need to take and do. You can find, if you try, the profiles of freelancers who started for food 4 months ago and have now moved to Sochi. They sit on the shore and forge big grandmothers.

A
Alexander Prokhorovich, 2021-11-08
@alexgp13

Now the freelance market is quite saturated with good specialists from the regions, working for quite modest money. It is difficult to interrupt their offers, since for a beginner there is not enough experience, and for an experienced specialist the rate is too low. Unfortunately, today the situation in freelancing is not at all the same as it was ten years ago.
It is best for you to get a job in a project office with a small team, so that you are pulled up as a specialist and after that think whether to stay in the office, go remote or go freelancing.
And yes, no one bothers to simultaneously register on a freelance exchange and try to grab orders that you can complete. If it shoots and you like it, you can quit the office quickly.

D
Dmitry, 2022-03-08
@silverstringer

There is no point in freelancing without decent work experience. The customer wants to work with specialists who quickly and efficiently solve his problems, because. he pays for it. No one will wait until a novice specialist solves his problem, and it is not known whether the problem will be solved at all and in what form.
The main criteria for the customer: time and quality.
For beginners, it is best to gain experience in the company . If there is an experienced mentor + the opportunity to plan a development map (development of soft, hard skills). See how software development processes are built, business processes are organized, etc. This at least saves time and will allow you to start freelancing in the future.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question