Introduction: The Chicken and Egg Problem
You can't get clients without reviews. You can't get reviews without clients.
This is the #1 struggle for new freelancers.
But there's a way around it. Thousands of freelancers get their first client every day – with zero reviews and zero experience.
In this guide, I'll show you exactly how to land your first freelance client.
Why Clients Don't Care About Reviews (As Much as You Think)
| What Clients Actually Want | What Freelancers Think They Want |
|---|---|
| Someone who solves their problem | A freelancer with 100 reviews |
| Someone who communicates well | A freelancer with a degree |
| Someone who delivers on time | A freelancer with a fancy portfolio |
| Someone who is reliable | A freelancer who is cheap |
Reviews help, but they're not the only thing that matters.
Strategy #1: Start on the Right Platforms
Best Platforms for Beginners (No Reviews)
| Platform | Why It's Good for Beginners | How to Stand Out |
|---|---|---|
| Upwork | Largest marketplace | Write amazing proposals |
| Fiverr | Clients find YOU | Create compelling gigs |
| Freelancer.com | Less competition | Start with contests |
| PeoplePerHour | Small projects | Offer low prices initially |
Avoid These as a Beginner
| Platform | Why Avoid |
|---|---|
| Toptal | Top 3% only – experienced freelancers |
| 99designs | High competition, contests |
| Guru | Smaller client base |
External Resource: Platform comparison at FreelancingPlatforms.com
Strategy #2: Write Winning Proposals (The Formula)
The 5-Part Proposal Formula
| Part | What to Write | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Greeting | Personalize with name | "Hi Sarah," |
| 2. Hook | Show you understand the problem | "I see you need help organizing your email inbox..." |
| 3. Your solution | How you'll solve it | "I can set up filters, labels, and auto-responders..." |
| 4. Why you | Even without experience, show enthusiasm | "I'm new to Upwork but I've been practicing V.A. skills for 2 months. I'll give you 100% effort." |
| 5. Call to action | Clear next step | "Can we hop on a 5-minute call to discuss?" |
Sample Proposal (Virtual Assistant)
Hi [Client Name], I see you're looking for a virtual assistant to help with email management and scheduling. I can: - Organize your inbox (filters, labels, folders) - Schedule appointments (Calendly, Google Calendar) - Respond to common customer questions with templates I'm new to Upwork but I've been learning virtual assistance for 2 months. I'm detail-oriented and responsive. I'll give you my full attention and deliver before deadlines. Can we hop on a quick 5-minute call to discuss your needs? Thanks, [Your Name]
Sample Proposal (Video Editor)
Hi [Client Name], Your YouTube videos are great but I noticed the pacing could be faster to improve retention. I can edit your raw footage into engaging videos with: - Jump cuts to remove dead air - Text overlays for key points - Music and sound effects - Color correction I've been learning CapCut for 2 months and have edited 10 practice videos. I'll send you a free 30-second sample edit of your footage so you can see my work before committing. When can I send you the sample? Best, [Your Name]
What NOT to Write
| Bad Proposal | Why It's Bad |
|---|---|
| "I can do this job. Hire me." | Too generic |
| "I have 10 years of experience" (you don't) | Don't lie |
| A 5-paragraph essay about yourself | Client doesn't care |
| "I'll work for any price" | Desperate |
External Resource: Proposal examples at Upwork.com/resources/proposal-tips
Strategy #3: Offer a Free or Low-Cost Sample
Why This Works
| Reason | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Zero risk for client | They have nothing to lose |
| Shows your skill | Proof is better than promises |
| Builds trust | You're confident in your work |
| Gets you in the door | Often leads to paid work |
How to Offer a Sample (The Right Way)
Bad: "I'll work for free."
Good: "I'll edit a 30-second sample of your footage for free. If you like it, we can discuss rates for the full video."
Sample Offer Templates
| Skill | Sample Offer |
|---|---|
| Video editing | "I'll edit a 30-second sample of your raw footage for free." |
| Copywriting | "I'll write 3 subject line options for your email for free." |
| Graphic design | "I'll design 2 thumbnail concepts for free." |
| Virtual assistant | "I'll organize your current inbox for free." |
| Social media | "I'll write 5 sample captions for free." |
Strategy #4: Price Low (Then Raise)
Why Start Low
| Reason | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Get your first review | Most valuable asset |
| Build portfolio | Real client work |
| Learn the process | Mistakes cost less at low rates |
| Get testimonials | Social proof for future clients |
Pricing Strategy (Upwork)
| Experience Level | Hourly Rate | Fixed Price (Small Project) |
|---|---|---|
| First 3 clients | $10-$15/hour | $20-$50 |
| After 5 reviews | $20-$30/hour | $50-$150 |
| After 10 reviews | $30-$50/hour | $150-$300 |
| After 20+ reviews | $50+/hour | $300+ |
Example: Video Editor Pricing
| Stage | Rate per Video | Total Clients | Monthly Income (10 videos) |
|---|---|---|---|
| First 3 clients | $30 | 3 | $300 |
| After 5 reviews | $50 | 5 | $500 |
| After 10 reviews | $80 | 5 | $800 |
| After 20+ reviews | $120 | 5 | $1,200 |
External Resource: Pricing guide at FreelancePricing.com
Strategy #5: Target the Right Clients
Best Clients for Beginners
| Client Type | Why Good | Where to Find |
|---|---|---|
| Small business owners | Need help, can't afford agencies | Upwork, local Facebook groups |
| New YouTubers | Need editing, small budget | Reddit r/YouTubers, Upwork |
| Solopreneurs | Overwhelmed, need VA help | Upwork, Fiverr |
| Startups | Move fast, need freelancers | AngelList, Upwork |
| Agencies (subcontract) | Have too much work | Upwork, cold email |
Clients to Avoid as a Beginner
| Client Type | Why Avoid |
|---|---|
| Large corporations | Require experience, long sales cycles |
| "Unlimited revisions" clients | Never satisfied |
| "I'll pay you when I get paid" | You'll never get paid |
| Extremely low budgets ($5 for 10 hours work) | Not worth your time |
Strategy #6: Use Alternative Platforms
Beyond Upwork and Fiverr
| Platform | Best For | Link |
|---|---|---|
| Reddit (r/forhire, r/slavelabour) | Quick gigs | Reddit.com/r/forhire |
| Professional networking | LinkedIn.com | |
| Facebook Groups | Niche communities | Search "[niche] freelancers" |
| Cold email | Direct outreach | Find emails via Hunter.io |
| Twitter/X | Build audience, get inbound leads | Twitter.com |
How to Use Reddit for Freelancing
Join r/forhire, r/slavelabour, r/freelance
Sort by "new" (not "hot")
Respond to posts within minutes
Send a DM with your offer
Include portfolio link
Example Reddit response:
"Hi! I'm a video editor. I can edit your 10-minute YouTube video for $30. Here's my portfolio: [link]"
External Resource: Reddit freelancing guide at Reddit.com/r/freelance/wiki
Strategy #7: Create a Simple Portfolio (Even Without Clients)
How to Create Samples (No Clients Needed)
| Skill | How to Create Samples |
|---|---|
| Video editing | Download free stock footage from Pexels, edit into 30-second video |
| Copywriting | Write blog posts on topics you know (publish on Medium) |
| Graphic design | Redesign existing logos/thumbnails (say "my version") |
| Virtual assistant | Create sample spreadsheets, email templates |
| Social media | Create a mock Instagram page with 10 posts |
Where to Host Your Portfolio
| Platform | Best For | Link |
|---|---|---|
| Google Drive | Simple, free | Drive.Google.com |
| Notion | Beautiful portfolios | Notion.so |
| Canva | Design portfolios | Canva.com |
| Contently | Writers | Contently.com |
The 30-Day First Client Action Plan
| Week | Actions | Goal |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Choose skill, learn basics, create portfolio (samples) | Ready to apply |
| Week 2 | Set up Upwork/Fiverr profiles, write proposals (10/day) | Get first interview |
| Week 3 | Continue proposals (10/day), offer free samples | Get first trial |
| Week 4 | Convert trial to paid, get review, celebrate! | First paid client |
Real Success Stories (Zero to First Client)
Story 1: Virtual Assistant
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Starting point | No experience, no portfolio |
| Action | Applied to 50 jobs on Upwork (10/day for 5 days) |
| Offer | "I'll organize your inbox for free" |
| Result | Client liked it, paid $100 for ongoing work |
| Time to first client | 12 days |
Story 2: Video Editor
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Starting point | Learned CapCut from YouTube (2 weeks) |
| Action | Found YouTuber with bad editing on Reddit |
| Offer | "I'll edit your next video for $20 (normally $50)" |
| Result | Client loved it, became regular at $50/video |
| Time to first client | 3 weeks |
Story 3: Copywriter
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Starting point | No writing experience |
| Action | Wrote 5 blog posts on Medium (personal finance) |
| Offer | Pitched small finance blogs: "I'll write a guest post for free" |
| Result | Got published, used as portfolio, landed $100/client |
| Time to first client | 6 weeks |
Common Mistakes When Trying to Get First Client
| Mistake | Why It's Bad | How to Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Applying to 5 jobs and giving up | Numbers game | Apply to 50-100 jobs |
| Generic proposals | Blends in | Personalize each |
| No portfolio | No proof | Create samples first |
| Too high prices | No takers | Start lower, raise later |
| Not following up | Missed opportunities | Follow up after 3-5 days |
| Waiting for perfect profile | Never start | Start now, improve later |