The problem with freelancers
12 Sept 2021
“Plato has a fine saying, that he who would discourse of man should survey, as from some high watchtower, the things of earth.” – Marcus Aurelius
If you’re running, or you’re part of a growing digital business, there’s a pretty good chance that you’re working with freelancers.
With an increasing demand for digital skillsets twinned with a shortage of people, you’ll probably need to work with freelancers in one capacity or another for the life of your business.
This isn’t great for freelancers, and it’s terrible for the future of your business, here’s why.
There are two problems that freelancers are currently used to solve:
There is no in-house resource available for the skill required (this needs done now)
There is no permanent need for the skill required (this is not something we need to do every day)
These problems occur either when a company has committed their team to a roadmap aligned with their core services, and they no longer have any additional team members to deal with incidental and increased demands, OR when a project or channel requires specialist input.
If you’re the person responsible for solving either of these problems you’ll be tasked with finding additional resources to make sure you stay on track, and more often than not, the following process (or something resembling it) unfolds.
It’s a whole lot of administrative heavy lifting for the freelancer, and is a process that needs to be repeated multiple times a year, there are quite a few more time (and motivation) sapping expectations of freelancers too such as:
Lack of clear documentation/briefs
Multiple stakeholders to manage at each role
Invoicing (and chasing unpaid invoices)
Differing, ‘on-site/remote’, requirements for each role
Unrealistic delivery expectations/timeframes
Additional complimentary skills required to complete delivery
At the moment, businesses (and the freelancers they rely on) are getting by (barely), but the future we’re building needs this system (it’s not, ‘the gig economy’) to scale more effectively and has a bunch of problems that need to be solved:
Businesses don’t need permanent teams for everything they need to do
Businesses can’t afford permanent teams for everything they need to do
Businesses are not set up to use fractional team members effectively
Resource requirements are going to become more elastic
Specialist skill sets are going to be more in-demand
Freelancers need predictable work pipelines
Freelancers need to be on-boarded faster
Freelancers need to be managed better
Freelancers need to be briefed better
Freelancers need their skills and ability measured quickly and accurately
Freelancers need to be paid faster and more reliably
We’re well on our way to solving these problems for businesses and freelancers here at Distributed, but I’d like to see more companies working on improving the use of elastic teams that’s not a marketplace for talent or some sort of SaaS play.
If you have any questions, comments or suggestions please tweet me @callumadamson
#recommendedreading
Tribe of Mentors — by Tim Ferriss
Chances are that if you’re reading this you already know who Tim Ferriss is, whether you do or not this book is marvellous. It’s a series of short Q&A’s from some of the most influential people on the planet and gives the reader a great insight into what helps them be who they are, while also imparting tons of life lessons easy to apply to your own life.