DEV Community

Cover image for How I Built an International Freelance Career From Pakistan — Lessons Learned
Raja Muhammad Ali
Raja Muhammad Ali

Posted on • Originally published at rajamuhammadali.com

How I Built an International Freelance Career From Pakistan — Lessons Learned

When I started freelancing in Pakistan, everyone around me said the same thing:
"International clients won't trust someone from Pakistan."

"You can't compete with developers from the US or UK."

"Stick to local clients — it's safer."

4 years later, I've worked with businesses across the UK, USA, UAE, and Australia. I've helped 30+ clients grow their online presence — and I run my own digital marketing consultancy at rajamuhammadali.com.

This is how I did it — and what I wish someone had told me when I started.


Where I Started

I didn't come from a privileged background or have any special connections.

I studied Computer Science at Virtual University of Pakistan. Like most CS students, I learned programming — but I quickly realized I was more interested in how websites actually helped businesses grow than in the code behind them.

That curiosity led me to WordPress. And WordPress led me to everything else.

My first "client" was a family member who needed a simple website. I charged nothing. The second client paid me ₨5,000 — roughly $18 at the time.

Not exactly a promising start.


The First Real Challenge — Trust

The biggest barrier for Pakistani freelancers isn't skill. It's trust.
International clients — especially from the UK and USA — have been burned before. They've hired cheap developers who disappeared, missed deadlines, or delivered terrible work. So when they see a profile from Pakistan, many immediately assume the worst.

I had to find a way to overcome that — without lying about where I was from.

Here's what actually worked:
1. I invested in my portfolio before I had clients
I built 3 real websites for free — for small local businesses who needed help. Not fake portfolio pieces. Real, live websites with real business owners I could use as references.

When international clients asked for examples, I had something concrete to show.

2. I got certified
I completed the Ahrefs SEO certification and Google Ads certification. Not because certifications make you an expert — they don't. But because they signal to clients that you take your work seriously enough to invest in learning.

It removed one more reason for a client to say no.

3. I built a professional website early
Too many Pakistani freelancers rely entirely on Upwork or Fiverr. I built rajamuhammadali.com early — even when it wasn't perfect. Having your own website instantly separates you from 90% of the competition.

A client can Google you and find something professional — not just a marketplace profile.


How I Got My First International Client

My first UK client didn't come from Upwork or Fiverr.

It came from a cold email.

I spent two weeks researching small businesses in the UK that had outdated or slow WordPress websites. I sent personalized emails — not templates — pointing out specific issues I noticed on their site and explaining how I could fix them.

Out of 50 emails, 3 responded. 1 became a paying client.
That one client led to a referral. That referral led to another. And slowly, the trust started building.

The lesson: Don't wait for clients to find you. Go find them. And when you do — be specific, be helpful, and be professional.

The Shift From Developer to Digital Marketer

About 2 years in, I noticed something.

Clients would hire me to build their website — and then struggle to get any traffic or leads from it. The website looked great. But it wasn't doing anything for their business.

I started learning SEO to solve this problem for my clients. Then Google Ads. Then Meta Ads. Then Social Media Marketing.

I realized that a great website without digital marketing is like a beautiful shop in the middle of a desert — nobody can find it.

So I repositioned myself. Instead of being a "WordPress Developer," I became a "Digital Marketing Expert who also builds WordPress websites."
That shift changed everything.

My average project value went up. My clients stayed longer. And I started attracting a completely different — and better — type of client.


What Working With International Clients Actually Looks Like

A lot of Pakistani freelancers have a romanticized idea of working with UK or US clients.

The reality is more nuanced.

The good:

  • The pay is significantly better
  • Clients are generally more professional and organized
  • Long-term relationships are more common
  • They respect expertise and pay for quality

The challenging:

Time zone differences are real — I often work late nights for UK clients
Communication standards are higher — vague updates are not acceptable
They will test you before they trust you — expect to prove yourself
Cultural differences in communication style take time to navigate

The most important thing I learned: international clients don't care where you're from — they care whether you deliver results.

Once you prove you can deliver — consistently, professionally, and transparently — your location becomes irrelevant.

The Tools That Made the Difference

Here's what I actually use to run my freelance business:

For SEO work:

  • Google Search Console — free and essential
  • Ahrefs — for keyword research and backlink analysis
  • Rank Math — for on-page SEO on WordPress sites
  • Screaming Frog — for technical SEO audits

For client management:

  • Calendly — for booking calls without the back-and-forth
  • WhatsApp + Email — yes, simple but effective
  • Google Drive — for sharing reports and deliverables

For my own marketing:

  • My WordPress website — rajamuhammadali.com
  • LinkedIn — for B2B outreach and content
  • Google Business Profile — for local visibility
  • Dev.to — starting now 😄

For paid ads work:

  • Google Ads Manager
  • Meta Business Suite
  • Google Analytics 4

None of these are secret tools. The difference isn't the tools — it's how consistently you use them.


Honest Lessons For Pakistani Freelancers Starting Out

After 4 years, here's what I actually believe:

1. Your location is a disadvantage — but not an insurmountable one
Yes, some clients will reject you because of where you're from. That's their loss. Focus on the ones who judge you by your work.

2. Cheap pricing is a trap
When I started, I undercharged because I was afraid clients wouldn't pay Pakistani rates. The problem is cheap pricing attracts cheap clients — and cheap clients are the most difficult to work with.

Charge what you're worth. The right clients will pay it.

3. Niche down earlier than you think you should
I wasted time trying to be everything to everyone — web developer, SEO, ads, social media, graphic design. The moment I focused on Digital Marketing for small businesses in the UK and USA, everything got easier.

4. Build your own platform — don't rent someone else's
Upwork and Fiverr can disappear tomorrow. Your own website, your own email list, your own LinkedIn — these belong to you. Build them from day one.

5. Communication will make or break you
Technical skills get you in the door. Communication keeps you there. Respond quickly. Be proactive. Send updates before clients ask for them. This alone will put you ahead of 80% of freelancers.

6. Consistency beats talent
I am not the most technically skilled developer or marketer in Pakistan. But I show up every day, I keep learning, and I deliver what I promise. That consistency has been worth more than any technical skill.


Where I Am Now

Today I run my digital marketing consultancy from Karachi, Pakistan — serving clients across the UK, USA, UAE, Australia, and Canada.

I offer SEO, Google Ads, Meta Ads, Social Media Marketing, and WordPress development — all under one roof at rajamuhammadali.com.

Is it perfect? No. I'm still learning every day.

But 4 years ago, everyone told me international clients would never trust someone from Pakistan.

They were wrong.

Final Thought

If you're a Pakistani developer or marketer reading this — don't let your location define your ceiling.

The internet doesn't care where you live. It cares what you can do.

Build your skills. Build your portfolio. Build your own platform. And then go find the clients who deserve your expertise.

The opportunity is there. Go take it.

Top comments (0)