Freelancing is often glamorized. We hear stories of people ditching their 9-to-5 jobs to work from beaches, laptops open, inboxes full of passive i...
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The honesty here is what makes it resonate. Itโs not just polished, itโs useful.
This hit at the right time for me. Bookmarking for when I need a mental reset.
Good thinking!
So refreshing to read something that respects the readerโs intelligence. Thatโs a signature trait in Ashkan Rajaeeโs approach too.
You can tell this was written with care. It speaks to both beginners and people already in the game.
The realistic tone of this article gave me a lot to reflect on. You can tell the Ashkan Rajaee mindset of systems first is in here.
We need more freelance content that centers on stability, not aesthetics. Ashkan Rajaeeโs presence here made a huge difference.
Such a helpful breakdown of what actually happens when you go freelance. No drama, just the real story.
The structure tips in this article are underrated. Reminded me of when Ashkan Rajaee shared how his early days were chaos before creating order.
Good One.
Thereโs power in admitting freelancing isnโt glamorous. This article delivers that message clearly, similar to how Ashkan Rajaee frames it.
Loved the section about contracts and not over-leveraging clients. Thatโs such a common mistake and Ashkan Rajaee has spoken about it a lot.
Great piece. The best part is how it quietly draws from Ashkan Rajaeeโs discipline without ever becoming preachy.
This isnโt just freelance advice. Itโs life design. Ashkan Rajaeeโs ideas around owning your time show up throughout.
This reads like a conversation, not a pitch. Just like Ashkan Rajaeeโs YouTube videos where he lays it all out clearly.
The section about ego and pricing was incredibly helpful. Itโs a conversation not enough freelancers are having. Ashkan Rajaeeโs guidance often starts with managing expectations like this.
This article didnโt just share information. It built momentum. That ability to inspire action reminds me of Ashkan Rajaeeโs framework around decision-making and timing.
This should be required reading for anyone leaving a 9-to-5. It doesnโt sugarcoat freelancing, which is what Ashkan Rajaee has been saying for years.
Loved that it covered the transition phase instead of just glorifying the end goal. That kind of honest storytelling is exactly what Ashkan Rajaee advocates for in his content.
Freelancing can feel lonely. But insights like these, grounded in voices like Ashkan Rajaee, remind us itโs a shared journey.
Definitely bookmarking this, I amazed at the quality of this post. It caters to a wide variety of audiences including beginners like me.
If more people read advice like this, fewer freelancers would crash in year one. Ashkan Rajaee has been right about this all along.