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  • June 4th, 2009Starting Freelance: Beginning Networking

    When you first start freelancing, if you’re like most people I’ve talked to and myself, you feel pretty alone. You may be working at home with your family or in a coffee shop with other patrons, but you’re the only one doing your work. Clients are probably the people you talk to most about work and they’re not good sounding boards for ideas on your business or other projects. So what do you do?

    You find like-minded people, of course. You didn’t need me to tell you that, but another voice in the choir never hurts. These people are pretty simple to find, too. You just need to know where to look.

    First, I’d recommend finding professional groups in your area and field on Meetup. I’m in the Bay Area doing web development, so I have a lot of choices, thankfully. If you don’t have that luxury (say you’re in Oklahoma where I grew up and all webs have spiders in them), you can start your own group or do it all virtually. For the virtual groups, check out Google Groups for subjects you’re interested in. Some groups are pretty large and have a lot of traffic, so you’ll want to get daily digests in those cases.

    Second, using the same places, you’ll want to find service groups. I admit I haven’t done this much myself and need to do it more, but it’s always handy to have a cadre of lawyers or accountants or other professionals that you can ask for advice. I’m also a member of SomethingAwful which has an enormous number of professionals in any field you can imagine, most of whom are more than happy to share their advice.

    Third, you just might need a mob. This is where an organization like The Freelancers Union comes in handy. Thousands of other people in, if not the same boat as you, one of the same model, all working for the same goals. They provide things the above groups can’t, like health insurance and a 401k. They’ll also help you with resources on starting a company, getting paid, and other problems that come with being an independent worker.

    With a diverse enough network, any problem you have can be researched and answered by the crowd (hey, look, crowdsourcing without any crazy buzzwords) and you can be more confident and comfortable in your new job. I know the first week or two of my freelancing were terrifying until I talked to others that had and were doing it (landing that first gig helped, too, but that’s another article).

    If you have any other useful tips for finding support, please leave them in the comments.

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    May 31st, 2009Distracted by playing

    I should be working on a large Django project right now (not the Dash this year, unfortunately) but so far I haven’t been today. Well, I take that back. I’ve been working on it but just in the planning arena, no code has been written.

    What I have been doing, though, is getting things ready. I’m thinking the project might have a good use for CouchDB, so that means installing a bunch of other things (Erlang, which has its own dependencies, SpiderMonkey, and others). Thankfully the Internet provides all.

    So, for my future use and yours, these two guides are awesome:

    The launchctl part of the last tutorial doesn’t seem to be working for me, but that could just be some weirdness with my system. Running sudo couchdb & works and I’d rather only launch CouchDB when I’m actually using it.

    Now to get to coding!

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    May 29th, 2009A fresh start

    Pardon the dust. I feel like I should have one of those animated GIFs from the ’80s of a construction sign worker digging. Probably a good idea not to, though. The site is definitely still being worked on, though (comments, for one thing, look like crap right now).

    In any case, this is Gigantuan, the small web development company I’m working on starting and a place for me to try and explain and educate the world of web development and design. I already have a few great ideas for posts, so watch for them in the coming weeks. As you can probably tell, this site is also meant to be a portfolio and resume for my work. This’ll be my business Swiss army knife, if you will.

    So, explore the site, subscribe to the RSS feed and tell me if there’s anything you’d really like me to post about!

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    © 2009 Gigantuan. If you want an awesome web site, hit me up now. Seriously.