freelance?
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- detritus0
English as a second language?
Some of that is borderline impenetrable.
Could do with a little pairing down.
You don't seem to encourage any balance in the narrative — it's all fantastic / everything is great... which kind of jars with the realities inherent in "Freelancer works for himself and, therefore, it is vital for him to keep customer satisfied with the results of his work".
- uan0
wendell?
- bjladams0
it reads as if it's written by someone who has never worked in a real company or as a freelancer...
- detritus0
That's kind of what I thought too, bjladams - or someone who's literally just started out and doesn't know the lonely world of pain and self-loathing they've just gotten themselves into..
- raf0
"coffee in large quantities" — are you sure you're not reading cons as pros? Working round the clock is not exactly "more freedom".
Anyway, keep up the enthusiasm and don't get burned out too quickly!
- clearThoughts0
keep it up. You'll become better with the time...
- qoob0
Good post. It sums what I enjoy about freelance. I also believe it is the wave of future.
- vaxorcist0
strangely written by somebody with ADHD who's been confined to a cubicle too long...
.... or maybe it was written on a blackberry while attempting to look involved while in endless meetings....
and yes, they're right,... in commong with many gigs:
"But as always , someone will be dissatisfied."
.... not always, a freelancer's job is to manage expectations and the "process" and/or egos of everyone involved....
- vaxorcist0
ah, one slightly crazy observation... it's written in a "passive voice" whereas if one is actually a true freelancer, the "passive voice" dissapears, because its "you and only you and you'd better fix it" rather than just ramble on about it.....
- robotron3k0
The guy is goes deep:
"Freelance designer rarely watches fantasy movies. Usually he simply does not have enough time for it."