
10 Things You Need To Know To Be Successful
Freelancing is often romanticized and seen as an escape from an annoying boss who doesnât value you.
But often, when people start working for themselves they quickly realize that they âquit 9-5 to work 24/7â.
This can have detrimental effects on your self-worth and mental health, but it doesnât mean freelancing is not worth it.
It can be a fulfilling experience if you get to it with the right mindset.
In this column, youâll learn SEO freelancing tips that will help you find more (and better) clients, build a sustainable business, and truly love what you do.
But first, letâs take a look at why so many people choose to go freelance.
Pros Of A Freelance Career
I mentioned a few cons of starting an SEO freelancing business above. So now itâs time to balance it out with the pros of this journey.
When you are a freelancerâŠ
You have more control over your time and life.
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You donât need to ask for permission to go to the dentist during the working day. You can even take a full weekday off, if your projects allow. Your schedule is your own.
Your salary can grow quickly.
Search Engine Journal research shows that 60% of SEO professionals earn the same or more than the U.S. median while working full-time.
But growth is often limited by the years of experience one has plus itâs hard to substantially increase your salary within one company. You would often need to change jobs to get a bigger increase.
But when youâre an SEO freelancer, you donât need to wait for a â3% yearly increaseâ in your salary. You can make more faster.
I made my previous full-time job salary within the first year of freelancing, and I more than doubled it in the next year.
Thatâs not a unique result, there are many other success stories from fellow SEOs who decided to start their freelancing careers.
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Moreover, thereâs literally no limit to how much you can make since you can grow your freelancing business into an agency or something else.
Working with clients directly.
It was one of the most important pros for me as I wanted to have a bigger impact on my clientsâ success.
You understand your clients better.
Being a business owner, you understand your clients better as you now know more about prioritization and estimating effort vs impact.
It helps you concentrate on the most meaningful recommendations instead of trying to fix all SEO issues.
I started my company two years ago without any business or freelancing experience, so I had to learn everything quickly.
Here are my 10 most valuable tips that I hope will help you get your SEO freelancing business up to speed (and keep you sane while doing it).
1. Talk To Other Freelancers
No matter where you are at, there are people who have already been there. They have experience and insights you can benefit from.
Getting tips from such people can save you months of figuring things out. Iâm personally really grateful to Aleyda Solis, Luke Carthy, Andrew Optmisey, Kirsty Hulse, and Troy Fawkes, who were open with me and helped me with their valuable advice.
A few tips on reaching out to people to ask for adviceâŠ
Be respectful of their time.
Donât just DM your list of questions or something vague like âplease help me.â If you build relationships instead, people will be happy to help you.
Ask specific questions.
The answers you get depend on the questions you ask. So make sure you ask specific questions that would really move the needle for you.
Youâre responsible for your decisions.
You ask people to get help, not to put responsibility for your business on them. So use common sense and see whatâs working for you and whatâs not.
2. Build Your Online Presence
You can be the best SEO ever. But if nobody knows about it, itâll be hard to succeed.
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We live in the world of so many voices on social media, and your voice should also be heard.
You can use LinkedIn to build your presence. You can use Twitter, start a newsletter, or do everything at once. The choice is yours.
But trust me, itâs much easier to talk to prospects if you have a great digital footprint.
I started building my LinkedIn and Twitter presence two months before I quit my job. It did help me get first clients and first students into my SEO course.
3. Treat Yourself As A Business
When you start your own business, you are now an accountant, a salesperson, an account manager, a legal department.
And you also pay your taxes (yes, thatâs frightening at first).
You need to account for this when pricing your services. Itâs not enough to just calculate the hourly rate you had at a day job. Youâll need a few times more to cover all other expenses.
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4. Learn To Price Your Services
Now you know that youâre a business, even if youâre currently the only person working in it.
The main goal of any business is to make a profit. So the next important thing is to embrace it and stop underselling yourself (it might be easier when you see your first tax bill).
A few tips here:
- Donât work for free.
- Use project-based pricing over hourly billing.
- Constantly improve and up your prices accordingly.
5. Learn How To Sell
When I started, I heard people saying âyouâre not in the business if you canât sell.â It would make me cringe every time.
I did not want to sell; in fact, I was afraid to do it.
Also, thereâs a common misconception that if youâre good at your craft (in SEO in our case), youâll automatically have many clients lining up to work with you.
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Thatâs not true. In reality, selling and SEO are completely different skills. And you need them both to succeed.
Everything changed for me when I accepted this truth. I started learning to sell.
Iâm not talking about door-to-door sales or sending annoying messages to your contacts on LinkedIn. Itâs much more subtle.
Whenever you jump on a call with a potential customer, youâre selling.
Even when youâre just talking or sharing your past wins, youâre selling.
Youâre selling ideas, results, yourself as a professional, your agency. Any conversation with a prospect is a sale.
The sooner you understand it, the better.
See also: How SEO Professionals & Agencies Win New Business [Survey Results]
6. Create Processes and Systems
I hear so many people saying that they still donât have a clear path they follow for an SEO audit or similar repeatable tasks.
Itâs okay if you donât have processes or systems right now. But itâs time to start building them.
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Creating processes will help make your freelancing business more efficient and improve margins. Processes are also valuable for the delegation at later stages if you decide to hire someone else to help you.
You donât need to create anything fancy. A process can start in the form of a simple checklist that you can expand over time.
7. Build Assets
When I started my freelancing business, I simultaneously started building a course.
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While I would not recommend everyone doing something big like that (as itâs exhausting), itâs still valuable to start building some kind of assets (for example, an ebook or a paid membership).
I truly believe that selling products in addition to services makes you a much better SEO as you learn a lot of marketing skills.
You start seeing audience research differently, learn copywriting, and understand your SEO clients much better.
Moreover, assets bring you passive income and they also keep you busy when thereâs not a lot of client work. They can also grow into something bigger in the future â who knows?
8. Set Yourself Up For A Long Journey
Starting a freelancing journey is not easy. Youâll need to figure out many things quickly. It can also be lonely.
All this can lead to constant overworking and issues with mental health.
In fact, according to this poll I did on Twitter, work/life balance is one of the 3 hardest things in freelancing:

So itâs better to take care of yourself and your work/life balance before itâs too hard to remember who you are in life outside of your business.
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Here are some tips:
- Have a support group who would cheer you up (your spouse, friends, fellow freelancers).
- Have a hobby that is not connected to your work (and ideally doesnât involve a computer, too).
- Schedule your leisure time.
- Set clear boundaries with yourself; donât work 12 hours a day in your pyjamas.
All these small things will ensure youâre running a marathon, not a sprint (yes, itâs an allusion to SEO).
9. Know Your âLawsâ And Stick To Them
You canât work on every type of SEO project out there. You canât work with all types of clients who come to you.
Trying to help everyone will only burn you out.
Instead, you need to have clarity on what you do (your strengths), how you help (your services), and who you help (types of clients you work with).

You will find it hard to say ânoâ to potential projects at first. But it will pay off in the long run.
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10. Help People Throughout the Way
Youâre valuable. No matter where you are in your freelancing journey, you can help someone who is a few steps behind you in something.
You can help in any way that suits you: writing a blog post, tweeting your tip, answering someoneâs question in a Slack group, etc.
Just know that your experience matters and one day (very soon) youâll be the one helping someone whoâs just starting.
Final Bricks
Life is too short to stay at a job you donât like or work on projects you donât enjoy.
When you open a freelancing journey for yourself, youâll have no limits.
I believe in you.
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