Announcing:

LessConf 2012 will be Feb 23-24 in Atlanta, Georgia!
Register today and make us smile super big!

If You Have No Work Then You Have Plenty Of Time

written by Steven on December 16, 2009

Allan and I have a friend who is a talented designer. Over the past few years his freelance business has done well. He's made a solid living even though he hasn't marketed himself. By "marketed himself" I mean his potential clients have no way to find him and even in the design community hasn't heard of him. During the past years' economic bubble this wasn't a problem because somehow the design projects always found their way to him. Now that the economy has tightened it's belt his workload has all but dried up, leaving him scrambling for full time or freelance work.

Last week he came to Allan and asked for some work. Unfortunately we currently do not have any projects in the design phase. So Allan suggested using his down time and going into a few popular open source projects and making them beautiful. He argued that he doesn't have time because he's spending all his time "trying to get paid".

This is highly flawed thinking. If you have no work then you have plenty of time. At the very least you should be able to find 2-3 hours a day to contribute to an open source project. Most new business comes from referrals, so becoming the hero of a bunch of developers will likely lead to those developers mentioning your name when they have the chance. This is a great way to get some fairly easy exposure.

Side Note: I might argue that once you have no work that marketing yourself is a bit late and we should all be taking time everyday to network ourselves in some form or fashion.

I hope you'll join us for LessConf 2012, Feb 23-24, 2012 in Atlanta Ga.
We're releasing our first ebook titled "How we built our consultancy to over $1,000,000 a year in revenue." Get early access to the ebook.

9 Comments

StuFF mc
StuFF mc said on December 16, 2009

Makes me think of one of the first tweets of Mike Matas after he left Apple “Enjoying my first day of unemployment” :-) We’re never happy, when we have too much work we’d like to have time and when we have time we’d like to have more work. Tell the guy he should enjoy his life, his family, and yes, get into something who doesn’t directly pays. If it wasn’t for Pomcast.com a few years ago (a podcast who never really brought me real money), I wouldn’t have today all my clients as an iPhone developers. You can only connect the dot backwars (S. Jobs at the Stanford speech.)

Rob Bazinet
Rob Bazinet said on December 18, 2009

I think working on an open source project is a great idea and a good way to show expertise and get future business but only as part of your total self-promotion.

I think your designer friend won’t be feeding his family anytime soon if he sets out to help out on an OSS project. He probably should get out and attend some user groups and business meetups.

Certainly fair advice but not to try to feed your family today.

Eric Davis
Eric Davis said on December 18, 2009

Contributing to Open Source is a great strategy if you have more time than work but it does take awhile to get going. It took me about 3-4 months of working on Redmine before I started to get some business from it. It started as “we heard of you because of your work on Redmine” but now about 90% of my work is “we want you to work on Redmine for us”.

There is a large gap of designer talent in the Open Source community. If someone really focused, they could make a great living off of it. That 2-3 hours per day could easily build a new theme for Redmine, each day! Give it a few weeks and that market is cornered. Then they could take on Radiant, Fat Free CRM, or any other project if they still need more.

essays
essays said on April 07, 2010

i totally agree with this one. have a work gives me no time to excel what i can do, to give more time to my family plus the fact that it is very hard.

Holsters
Holsters said on May 31, 2010

The terrible problem is when you have lot of work, no time, an still have no money. I can speak from experience that this deadly combination is a real possibility.

Steven Bristol
Steven Bristol said on May 31, 2010

Hi Holsters,

Finding yourself in this situation probably means you’re not charging enough money. You know you’re charging enough money when the work load is fun and manageable. Too much money when you don’t have enough to keep you busy. And not enough money when you have too much work and you’re still not paying your bills.

Wendy
Wendy said on August 05, 2010

This is quite true for people who just quit on their job who are looking for ways how to do living after. Its true, they may consider online business, its worth the try.

Stan
Stan said on October 18, 2010

great job, this is brilliant, keep up your work! :)

dissertation writing
dissertation writing said on December 07, 2010

It’s very good that Allan suggested using his down time and going into a few popular open source projects and making them beautiful!
Well done!

Leave a Comment

About Steven
Steven Bristol has written code for the past 20 years. He like green vegetables and kittens, oh and butterflies too. He loves to throw ninja stars at his enemies.

You Should...

Follow Steven on Twitter
Friend Steven on Facebook
Subscribe
LessEverything Copyright 2011 LessEverything.com
We don't like footers, they're kinda boring