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Ask HN: Those who switched back to regular job after freelancing

5 pointsby 2bor-2nabout 4 years ago
People who switched back to regular jobs after freelancing. What was your motivation for doing that? Did you find freelancing worthwhile?

2 comments

PragmaticPulpabout 4 years ago
I’ve hired several freelancers into full-time jobs. The motivation is usually that full time jobs are easier and pay more for those who have the skills.<p>Constantly finding new clients is hard. Constantly dealing with new companies and clients who often have strange expectations or demands is hard. Showing up for a 9-5 job where most issues are someone else’s problem is very attractive to devs who just want to write code and collect paychecks.
mneilabout 4 years ago
I freelanced for 7 years and am back at a regular job now.<p>Things I miss about freelancing: - freedom. I work from home now and have flexibility. But flexibility is not the same as freedom. I would take off a month straight. Or blow off a week with little notice. As long as I managed my customers expectations I could do these things. - varying work. It was much easier to dip into new tech or go after work that stretched my skills constantly. I think I became a much better developer and a much better person overall because of my years working for myself. - being picky. If I didn&#x27;t like something I didn&#x27;t have to accept or pursue the work. Sometimes now I get directives that limit me or my team from doing the best we can and I&#x27;d love to say, &quot;I&#x27;m not doing that&quot;<p>Pros of the in office job: - coworkers. First, make sure you like them before you start. Bring next to other smart people can help you long term. You can make strong bonds that help you advance your career. I&#x27;ve worked with one person I met in one job at two other jobs now. People change jobs, knowing people is half the battle. - social activities. Freelancing is isolating. Yes, go to meetups, go to conferences, join groups online. But it&#x27;s still not the same as, &quot;I&#x27;ll see these 10 smart people every single day and can talk to them at will&quot;<p>I&#x27;m now regular job but fully remote. Benefits: - you get to work with smart people. But you have to very outgoing and constantly teaching out. I&#x27;m a bit of an introvert. I&#x27;ve had to learn this skill. Freelancing 100% helps here. You also need a good team who is also not afraid to communicate. - flexibility: I mentioned this already but I take my kids to school and pick them up everyday. During the pandemic I monitored and kept the kids on track during home school while my spouse was at work. You can&#x27;t do that in an office typically. I can split my day or take a long lunch and nobody cares. - super smart people. The smartest people I&#x27;ve met have been during remote working (I&#x27;m 3+ years in now. 2 different jobs). It&#x27;s not always like this. But remote jobs tend to try and find the best from anywhere. And when that is successful you will benefit from knowing those people.<p>I have happened to switch jobs roughly every 3 years. Freelancing was nice because it was a solid 7 year block where I could say I went from gig to gig and nobody bats an eye. With office jobs people start to question if you go from place to place in less than a years time :). I&#x27;ve found switching jobs to be the best way to learn the most and continually get higher pay. Each job I take I hope will be the one good enough to keep me around longer. If you&#x27;re not learning at your current position, and you&#x27;ve stuck around for 2 years or more, then switch.<p>Oh, why did I initially switch back to a day job...<p>2 things: freelancers rarely get to stick around for long periods of time on big teams to build cool things. I was either solo and building a medium sized app or would work in a small team building something slightly bigger, or a large team where I&#x27;d build just one part. Working full time you get to see big projects start to finish.<p>The job itself. I was looking for freelancing work, found a good company, they wanted me full-time and I really liked the team and the work.<p>Stability of pay. I am married, have 2 children, and own a home. I did that all while freelancing. But my stress was reduced when I stopped having to constantly look for my next thing.