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In this episode, Frankie Tortora and Steve Folland have a chat in response to a question from designer, coder and illustrator Andi Best.
Andi says:
“I can't go on like this — I think I need to give in and ask for help!
I am inundated with work and the enquiries keep coming, which is a great problem to have, but I don’t know what to do about it.
Previously I've mitigated large volumes of work by quoting higher or asserting my unavailability — ultimately turning work away. For a "busy period" that works well, but for the past 6 months I've been consistently (too) busy, and I now accept that I need to try something else. I just don't want to keep saying 'no'.
I think I need more resource? I don't want ‘staff’ (insurance, sick leave, payroll? No thanks!) but I do want something more robust than the ad-hoc outsourcing I do now.
I think I need a firm freelance partnership? Or agency temp?
Or similar arrangement?
What's holding me back is a lack of trust in an unknown entity (the quality of the work, sharing client credentials etc.) — ultimately relinquishing control of the work that's getting my name attached to it. And also a fear that their rates will exceed the fees already agreed for the work.
Any advice?
Thanks, Andi”
What would your advice be? Let us know your thoughts using #DIFTKpodcast on Twitter and Instagram, and join in the conversation via the DIFTK Community.
•••
Andi Best's website
Frankie Tortora's website
Steve Folland's website
Steve's podcast - Being Freelance
Doing It For The Kids website
DIFTK Instagram
DIFTK Twitter
Support DIFTK on Ko-Fi
By Doing It For The Kids, Frankie Tortora, Steve Folland5
66 ratings
In this episode, Frankie Tortora and Steve Folland have a chat in response to a question from designer, coder and illustrator Andi Best.
Andi says:
“I can't go on like this — I think I need to give in and ask for help!
I am inundated with work and the enquiries keep coming, which is a great problem to have, but I don’t know what to do about it.
Previously I've mitigated large volumes of work by quoting higher or asserting my unavailability — ultimately turning work away. For a "busy period" that works well, but for the past 6 months I've been consistently (too) busy, and I now accept that I need to try something else. I just don't want to keep saying 'no'.
I think I need more resource? I don't want ‘staff’ (insurance, sick leave, payroll? No thanks!) but I do want something more robust than the ad-hoc outsourcing I do now.
I think I need a firm freelance partnership? Or agency temp?
Or similar arrangement?
What's holding me back is a lack of trust in an unknown entity (the quality of the work, sharing client credentials etc.) — ultimately relinquishing control of the work that's getting my name attached to it. And also a fear that their rates will exceed the fees already agreed for the work.
Any advice?
Thanks, Andi”
What would your advice be? Let us know your thoughts using #DIFTKpodcast on Twitter and Instagram, and join in the conversation via the DIFTK Community.
•••
Andi Best's website
Frankie Tortora's website
Steve Folland's website
Steve's podcast - Being Freelance
Doing It For The Kids website
DIFTK Instagram
DIFTK Twitter
Support DIFTK on Ko-Fi

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