I work for clients at 6-12 months stretches as an independent contractor. Sometimes longer. And when I part with them I usually stay around on a monthly retainer. The retainer then keeps me in the loop with them, and I often get billed for smaller tasks their team can't address, or needs extra capacity on.
Through a lot of trial and error, coming up from sites like Upwork, Fiverr, etc. That's the only way I feel that "freelancing" works for me. Where I am deeply networked and have already build rapport with the clients.
I think that’s hard to agree with and we do freelance work all the time.
This is because people go to freelancers for 1. Speed 2. Quality 3. Temporary work
If something is temporary and you want it fast then a majority of the time you’ll want it cheap.
BUT you could find a really small market that wants to go fast and expensive - it’s just much smaller
It definitely can, there is a lot of money on the market and the current options can't serve everybody. It is just a matter of executing it well. Especially if not taking a %. People are getting tired of paying so much for matchmaking.
I am looking for an iOS developer to help me bring a minimum-viable prototype over the finish line.
Your post prompted to check out Toptal. I signed up. What's so onerous about Toptal?
> lightly vetted but less onerous than Toptal, less race to the bottom than Upwork platform
What do you think the reasons are for lack of a platform in the middle?
For small things I prefer bounties where anybody can claim the bounty, and there is a set end date where your software has to be ready to be reviewed instead of one guy claiming it then taking forever to finish. Whoever is accepted wins the bounty.
For me any kind of freelance Toptal like site needs to be specific about hours they expect you to be available as most people will be doing it P/T after school, or whatever other job they're doing. There is of course the problem with clients not paying, then your site is on the hook to pay the developer.