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SHOWING 10 LATEST NEWS OUT OF 861

June 3

WEEKLY DIGEST #23 OF 2026

  • The Neo-Shamrock a Cognitive Architecture for Independent Practice — Nigel Rawlins presents the Neo-Shamrock framework, reimagining Charles Handy’s classic organizational model as a cognitive architecture for freelancers. Rather than viewing outsourcing and AI adoption through a purely financial lens, Nigel explains how shifting tasks directly impacts a freelancer's long-term expertise. By balancing four "leaves"—Core, Cloud, AI, and Community—you can systematically leverage AI and outsourcing without falling into the "augmentation trap" or losing your core expertise.
  • How to Shift Fields Without Starting Over, by Sara Gibson — Shifting fields doesn't have to mean burning bridges and starting from scratch. Sara explores how to use your existing experience as a springboard for a new career. Instead of throwing away years of work, she shows how to reframe your current skills and sell them in a new context.
  • Cyclical Business Planning — Sarah Duran presents the next online session of her Future is Freelance Forum on June 16th, tackling Cyclical Business Planning. Alongside featured guests Jenni Gritters and Ivy Bromius, this session flips the script on traditional panels. Instead of just trying to survive the year, you’ll dive into a collaborative, workshop-style conversation about what changes when you design your business around your real rhythms.
  • Why People Who Love Your Work still Don't Refer You, by Lilli Graf – Sometimes people love your work, yet they still don't recommend you. Lilli Graf breaks down the frustrating paradox of why mere admiration isn't enough. To get people talking, they need to know exactly what you do, have proof that it works, and know when and how to easily recommend you. If these points are missing, even your biggest fan simply won't mention you in a conversation with a potential client.

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May 27

MARK MCGUINNESS'S FIRST BLOG POST

"Everything I’ve written and published since – hundreds of blog posts, four books for creatives and two podcasts – began with that first blog post." Mark McGuinness, coach for creative professionals, reflects on the twentieth anniversary of his first blog post in 2006 and describes how ignoring skeptics to build a daily writing habit completely transformed his career and personal life.

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May 20

WEEKLY DIGEST #21 OF 2026

  • Dotolist — Creating a One-Click Team, by Tomas Baranek — Collaborative tools don't have to be rocket science. Tom shares Dotolist, a minimalist, no-login task manager he built to coordinate one-off projects with tech-averse partners in just one click.
  • The Dark Side of the Jevons Paradox, by Cal Newport — Ever heard of the Jevons Paradox? Cal explains how making workers hyper-efficient with AI won’t actually shrink the labor market. Instead, it will slash production costs and trigger a massive explosion in demand for services. However, he delivers a crucial warning: just as email and Slack accidentally trapped us in a cycle of endless interruptions, unchecked AI efficiency could easily backfire, leading to unprecedented digital overload and burnout for freelancers.
  • She's Usually the Only Illustrator in the Room. Clients Come to Her"My selling point is that I understand how museums work." On the Being Freelance podcast with Steve Folland, illustrator Jessica Hartzhorn shares her journey from a secret Instagram to becoming the go-to specialist in the museum niche using a B2B product brochure, video marketing, and standardized "no" templates.
  • How to Use AI in Your Freelance Business — Sarah Duran summarizes her latest Future is Freelance Forum, framing AI not as a replacement, but a junior partner for grunt work. She highlights that automation requires defined processes and diagnoses what freelancers dislike doing.
  • Prepare Your “NO” and Keep It Handy — Derek Sivers shares a practical strategy for dealing with high-pressure requests: preparing and memorizing a thoughtful, versatile "no" template in advance to reject unwelcome offers quickly and politely without guilt.

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May 13

WEEKLY DIGEST #20 OF 2026

  • Margareta Krizova Freelance Advice: Six Questions That Replace Your Business Plan — Business mentor Margareta Křížová joins Nigel Rawlins on the Wisepreneurs podcast to deconstruct the leap from corporate leadership to a 'third career' in freelancing. Drawing on her experience selling an M&A firm at 53, she reveals the six essential questions that replace bloated business plans and explains why a side hustle is the safest exit strategy. Margareta also warns against the financial trap of 'invisible work' and shares how to use AI as a strategic thought partner to amplify decades of professional judgment.
  • I Spent 12 Years as a Freelancer. Today I Became a Founder, by Benas Leonavicius — After a decade of elite freelancing, Benas shares his transition from solo expert to agency founder. He dissects the 'clarity ceiling' that many high-earning independents face—where growth stops being about revenue and starts being about infrastructure. He explores overcoming the 'shoemaker’s problem' by building personal authority and a team to solve high-level client challenges at scale.
  • Why You Need To Sell Your Talent Instead Of Your Time — Sara Gibson explores the shift from hourly billing to value-based pricing, introducing the Efficiency Penalty concept. She outlines a strategic framework for choosing between flat fees and hourly rates, while offering tactical advice on mitigating scope creep and implementing hybrid retainer models.
  • Why Clients Ignore Your Portfolio — In this coaching episode, Preston Lee and Christine Olivas diagnose why freelancer Meg’s inquiries go cold after viewing her work. They shift the focus from treating a portfolio as a passive gallery to using it as an active sales tool, offering a breakdown of how to frame past projects to meet client expectations and drive conversions.
  • The One-Person Empire: How to Beat 50-Person Content Mills at Their Own Game — Jamal Washington challenges the traditional agency growth model, arguing that solo professionals can outperform large-scale firms by using AI as strategic leverage. He outlines a high-margin business model where the freelancer shifts from 'content creator' to 'systems orchestrator'—deploying specialized engines to deliver high-volume results.

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May 6

WEEKLY DIGEST #19 OF 2026

  • The Other Work: What it Means to Work ON a Freelance Business — Sarah Duran highlights that working "on" your business—strategy, systems, and "invisible" reflection—is what prevents stagnation. It’s not just admin; it’s about setting direction and knowing what not to do. To stay sustainable, build this time into your pricing and calendar. You’re likely doing more of this work than you realize—it’s time to give yourself some credit for it.
  • Project Backbone — Ever wondered how and where the internet actually flows around the globe? Project Backbone shows that the cloud isn't some intangible virtual entity, but a physical network of undersea cables and data centers. This map reveals where and how the digital world exists in the physical one.
  • Your Product Has a New User. It’s Not Human — Internet usage is shifting with the rise of AI. Elena Verna points out that AI agents are the newest users. This reality shatters the assumption that products are built for people. Agents do not need aesthetics or polished UI. Instead, they demand machine-readable data, flawless APIs, and absolute reliability. If an agent cannot navigate your service, do you even exist in the new economy?
  • Freelancers, Stop Pitching, Start Presenting — To truly captivate a client, a dry list of skills won’t cut it. Katherine Steiner-Dicks proposes a tactical shift: replacing the standard pitch with a TED-style narrative framework. As she says, by leading with a "throughline"—a single, compelling idea—you can move from being a price-driven commodity to a vision-driven authority.

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May 5

NEW MEMBER: MAREK PECH

Marek Pech, a performance strategist and web analyst who transforms digital advertising into a high-octane engine for global growth. Specializing in complex SEM ecosystems, Marek helps brands—from innovative IT firms to large-scale e-commerce players—navigate the intricacies of international expansion across Western Europe and the USA with data-driven precision.

With over 5 years of experience managing monthly budgets reaching $1.3 million, his expertise goes far beyond simple ad management. He is a specialist in advanced web analytics and technical implementations, such as GA4 server-side measurement for multi-million euro enterprises, and is a master of margin bidding and conversion optimization. By prioritizing "strategies that scale profitably," Marek ensures that every click translates into measurable revenue, frequently doubling leads and revenue while drastically reducing acquisition costs for long-term operational success.

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April 30

WEEKLY DIGEST #18 OF 2026

  • Advice I'd Give Past Me — Advice for your younger self? While Patrick Collison’s tips target the 10–20 age group, they are inspiring for everyone. The essentials remain: read widely, build your own worldview, and don't be afraid to stand out.
  • The Weight Isn't the Task — The real weight of tasks lies in the dozens of tiny decisions accompanying them, rather than the execution itself. Lilli Graf suggests overcoming this hesitation by creating a steady weekly ritual—focusing on one area and taking just two concrete steps. True relief comes from seeing your progress in black and white, freeing you from the mental load of carrying every detail in your head.
  • Why Ending Projects Well Might Be the Secret to Having More Work — The way you close a project is often more important than how you started it. Proper offboarding builds the kind of loyalty that generates referrals and repeat business that wouldn't happen otherwise. Steven Sparling suggests going beyond a simple delivery: create a comprehensive handover package, secure a testimonial, and propose specific next steps. By maintaining this level of precision and care until the very end, you transition from a one-time vendor into a long-term strategic partner.
  • How to Ask for Testimonials Without the Cringe — Good testimonials are often the deciding factor in a client's choice to hire you. To bridge the gap between awkwardness and social proof, Sara Gibson suggests striking during the peak happiness window right after delivery. By asking for specific outcomes or even providing a draft for approval, you remove the friction for the client. In an era of AI-generated content, shifting toward video testimonials could also be the ultimate trust-builder.

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April 29

MONTHLY CAFÉS FOR FREELANCERS

Have you heard of the Monthly Cafés? Hosted once a month by Elina Jutelyte, founder of the Freelance Business Community, these free meetups offer a relaxed virtual space for solopreneurs to share wins and tackle challenges together. Whether starting out or scaling up, these sessions provide fresh insights and a supportive network of independents. The next one takes place on May 28th.

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April 23

WEEKLY DIGEST #17 OF 2026

  • The Founders’ Tribune is a refreshing shift away from the ad-cluttered marketing blogs of today. By delivering just one high-quality essay every Sunday from the world’s leading builders, it prioritizes intellectual depth over commercial noise.
  • Why Your Passion Project Deserves a Seat at the Table — Sara Gibson reminds us that passion projects are the "soul work" that prevents freelancers from being consumed by client brands. Even in hustle mode, she suggests the 15-minute rule to keep the spark alive without the pressure of profit. By separating your "work brain" and embracing seasonality, you ensure your projects stay on the back burner rather than being turned off entirely—protecting who you truly are.
  • As highlighted by Matthew Dowling, founder of the Freelancer Club, the 2026 UK IR35 shift returns tax status responsibility from thousands of firms back to the freelancer. While this reduces corporate friction, it forces you to personally shoulder the financial risk of HMRC audits. Unlike previous legal battles where freelancers fought for employee rights, this update demands you prove your own autonomy to avoid heavy retroactive tax liabilities. Official guidance.
  • Tools for Setting & Achieving Goals, a podcast by Andrew Huberman — Psychologist Emily Balcetis warns that traditional "vision boards" can actually drain your drive by tricking the brain into premature satisfaction. To combat this, she suggests the Narrow Focus technique: mentally black out distractions and treat your immediate task like a target in a spotlight. This physiological shift can increase output speed by 27% while making deep work feel 17% easier—moving you from passive dreaming to high-performance readiness.

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April 22

NEW MEMBER: SEBASTIAN AGUAS

Meet our new member: Sebastian Aguas, a senior Chinese-English-Czech interpreter and technical consultant who bridges the linguistic and cultural gaps in global manufacturing and automotive engineering. Specializing in complex industrial environments, Sebastian helps industry leaders—including Toyota, Skoda Auto, and Continental—navigate the technical intricacies of machine installation and commissioning with absolute precision.

With over 15 years of experience and a sophisticated academic background—holding Master’s degrees in both Sinology and Management—his expertise extends far beyond literal translation. He is a specialist in facilitating the integration of Chinese machinery into European production lines and has conducted over 100 CCC audits across the continent. By prioritizing "communication that keeps the production line moving," Sebastian ensures that complex technical transfers result in operational success rather than costly delays.

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