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Glossary


Freelancing Fundamentals

Freelancer โ€” An independent professional who provides services to clients on a project or contract basis, without being a permanent employee of any single company.

Gig economy โ€” The labor market characterized by short-term, flexible, and independent work arrangements rather than traditional full-time employment.

Independent contractor โ€” The legal classification for freelancers. You control how and when you work, use your own tools, and are responsible for your own taxes and benefits.

Niche โ€” A specialized segment of the market that you focus on. Defined by the intersection of your skill, your target client type, and your industry focus.

Portfolio โ€” A curated collection of your best work samples that demonstrates your capabilities to potential clients.

Retainer โ€” An ongoing agreement where a client pays a fixed monthly fee for a set amount of your time or deliverables.

Scope of work (SOW) โ€” A document defining exactly what you'll deliver, the timeline, the price, and the responsibilities of both parties.

Pricing

Billable hours โ€” Hours spent on client work that you can charge for. Distinct from non-billable hours (admin, marketing, sales).

Effective hourly rate โ€” Your actual earnings per hour worked, calculated by dividing total project revenue by total hours spent (including non-billable time). The true measure of your earnings.

Hourly rate โ€” Charging based on time spent. Simple but caps your earning potential.

Project-based pricing โ€” A fixed fee for a defined deliverable, regardless of hours spent. Rewards efficiency.

Retainer pricing โ€” A recurring monthly fee for ongoing work or availability.

Value-based pricing โ€” Pricing based on the business value your work creates for the client, rather than your time or costs.

Client Acquisition

Cold outreach โ€” Contacting potential clients who don't know you. Emails, messages, or calls to prospects you've identified through research.

Conversion rate โ€” The percentage of proposals that result in paid engagements.

Discovery call โ€” An initial conversation with a potential client to understand their needs, assess fit, and lay the groundwork for a proposal.

Inbound marketing โ€” Attracting clients through content, SEO, and social media so they come to you, rather than you pursuing them.

Lead โ€” A potential client who has expressed interest or been identified as a prospect.

Pipeline โ€” Your system of tracking potential clients from initial contact through proposal to signed engagement.

Referral โ€” A client introduction from someone who already knows and trusts you. The highest-quality client acquisition channel.

Warm network โ€” People who already know you: former colleagues, friends, family, professional contacts.

Business Operations

1099 (Form 1099-NEC) โ€” The US tax form clients use to report payments made to freelancers. Issued for payments of $600 or more annually.

LLC (Limited Liability Company) โ€” A business structure that creates a separate legal entity, protecting personal assets from business liabilities.

Net terms โ€” Payment timeline (Net 15 = due within 15 days, Net 30 = within 30 days).

Quarterly estimated taxes โ€” Tax payments freelancers must make four times per year to the IRS (and often state tax authorities) based on projected annual income.

S-Corp election โ€” A tax status that can reduce self-employment taxes by allowing the freelancer to split income between salary and distributions.

Schedule C โ€” The IRS form used by sole proprietors to report business income and expenses on their personal tax return.

Self-employment tax โ€” The combined Social Security and Medicare tax (approximately 15.3%) that freelancers pay on net self-employment income.

Sole proprietorship โ€” The default business structure for freelancers. No formal registration required. The freelancer and business are legally the same entity.

Project Management

Change order โ€” A formal modification to the original scope of work, typically involving additional cost and timeline adjustments.

Deliverable โ€” A specific, tangible output that you produce for the client (a report, a design, a website, code, etc.).

Milestone โ€” A significant point in the project timeline, often tied to a payment or deliverable.

Scope creep โ€” The gradual, uncontrolled expansion of project requirements beyond the original agreement.

Scaling

Agency model โ€” Growing beyond solo work by hiring employees or contractors to serve more clients simultaneously under your brand.

Digital product โ€” A product (course, template, ebook, toolkit) created once and sold repeatedly without per-sale production costs.

Passive income โ€” Revenue that doesn't require active work for each dollar earned (digital products, royalties, affiliate commissions). Note: creating the asset requires significant upfront work.

Productized service โ€” A standardized service offering with defined scope and fixed pricing, making it repeatable and scalable.

Subcontracting โ€” Hiring other freelancers to execute work under your direction while you maintain the client relationship.