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Being an independent consultant or freelancer is extremely worthwhile; however, upfront project preparation and proactive client management during any project are keys to success. Unlike a corporate set up, there is no finance department to handle your salary, or a dedicated marketing team to tell you whom to reach out and offer your expertise to. These tasks become your responsibility when you decide to become your own boss. Amidst of all these responsibilities, one might end up overlooking something that is essential for the successful completion of a project.
Below is a checklist that every independent consultant must go over before signing up for a new project. From the pre-project phase to organizing the important aspects of your action plan, this list ensures that you learn and enhance your skills from every project that you take up.
Selection Phase
The first and the most crucial step to ensure the success of the assignment is to understand what the client expects from you, the end result that the organization requires, and how the project will help them fulfill that requirement.
Know the Client — even a broad understanding will help you assess what you will contribute to
through your work
Know the Project — These will help you develop your work plan and set timelines for each task in the
project
Before going ahead with a project, make sure you possess the skills and have relevant experience required for it. Many people just focus on their strengths, but it is also necessary to understand your areas of weakness and possible mitigation — at a minimum you need to ensure you can actually do the project. It is much better to turn down a project than to realize halfway that you could fail.
Evaluate yourself:
Strengths
capability in those fields
Weaknesses
questions about the project that would mitigate these
Before starting the project work
These include:
Since freelancers aren’t covered by the same laws that employees are, it becomes extremely important to have a formal contract in place covering all the important details such as scope of work, mode of payment, deadline for payments, professional liability, confidentiality etc. While it’s a common notion that contracting and ‘extra paperwork’ might drive away clients, be assured that a good client will always be happy to invest the additional time rather than deal with a confrontation later.
The one reason why a lot of professionals turn to freelancing is that they like to have their own schedule in place rather than being bound by a 9–5 schedule. Ensure that your client knows about your availability (days and time) and for what duration.
Let them know
A project might require you to work remotely or work out of the client’s office. Have clarity about how you and the client can be in touch and share information (email, phone, collaboration tools like Slack, Skype). Also, in case the project is remote always try and do at least one initial meeting via Skype — for a face to face conversation is always different.
Check with the client the basis and the nature of the payment. Will your fees depend on the number of hours you put in or the quantum of work you deliver? How soon do you expect to receive the payment after raising the invoice? This is absolutely critical since this will allow you to plan your finances better in the face of irregular cash flows.
**This article was first published by Flexing It, on Network18**
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