Clients can sometimes take their time when deciding whether to hire freelancers. They might not be sure if they should go ahead, or be unconvinced that they鈥檝e found the right person for the job.
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If this sounds familiar, and you鈥檙e waiting on that call or email to say 'go', then there are steps you can take to seal the deal. The following five easy tricks will help you strike while the iron鈥檚 hot:
Treat the client like you鈥檙e already hired. Use language like 鈥榳e鈥 and 鈥榦ur鈥 to firmly marking your place on the team. Care deeply about their brand and go above and beyond expectations to show that you鈥檙e passionate about helping them succeed. That鈥檚 whether you鈥檙e pitching, emailing or speaking to them over the phone 鈥 be personable and enthusiastic. Remember, people buy into people, not brands. If they like you and feel as though you鈥檙e already a part of their company structure, you can鈥檛 go wrong.
Often the biggest hurdle to hiring anyone is the price. Make yourself irresistible and lessen the perceived risk by offering a discounted introductory rate, perhaps for the first three months. It鈥檒l sweeten the deal and ensure the client doesn鈥檛 go elsewhere. Just make sure you have this term in writing, so you鈥檙e able to reintroduce your standard rate once the initial period is up.
The client loved your pitch. They didn鈥檛 flinch at your day rate. Now you just need to get going before they change their mind. This is where the suggestion of an initial workshop is a great idea. It鈥檚 a chance to get a foot in the door and meet the internal people who you鈥檒l be working with. Perhaps you can create an agenda, or even a mood board, to act as a talking point and allow everyone involved to plot out the next steps. Every project has to start somewhere. It鈥檚 best that you firmly plant yourself in the strategic process, so you don鈥檛 miss a trick and can ensure you鈥檙e included in the weeks and months to come.
Still not getting anywhere? Remind them you鈥檙e still available. That鈥檚 whether you opt for sending a newsletter (with their permission, of course) or simply point them to a blog post or tweet, potential clients might be swayed if they see how well you鈥檙e doing elsewhere. Seeing great case studies sparks their curiosity. It gets them thinking 鈥渨e really need to hire that guy鈥. You want to appear 鈥榠n demand鈥 and delivering solid work. It makes you irresistible and keeps the competition at bay.
Nothing convinces a client more that you鈥檙e the right person for the job than showing passion for their own company. Drop them a friendly line to point them to a relevant news article you think they鈥檇 find interesting. Or inform them of something one of their competitors has done. It keeps you fresh in their mind, so when they鈥檙e ready to go ahead 鈥 you鈥檒l be the first person they call.