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by mcv
2147 days ago
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That depends entirely on how you freelance. I join teams. My current project, for a major Dutch bank, started with me developing the prototype, and later interviewing a bunch of people (internal and external) to join the team that I'm still part of. At other projects, I was hired to add some external expertise to an existing team. But it's mostly long projects in teams. But before I ended up in these sort of big projects, I went to a lot of local meetups to keep in touch with other freelancers. That can also be a great source of a network, although that never amounted to much for me. > "Lots of other small startups contacting me all the time trying to convince me to do a lateral move, but what's the point, I will just be the only in-house dev, stuck and stagnant again." It can be a great way to prove to the companies you actually want to get hired by, that you can work in a company as part of a team. |
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A contractor is typically on site, or sells his time (and presence), meaning he has one client at a time.
A freelancer to me works on projects, and will take on multiple clients at the same time.