TL;DR
- Your existing network converts faster than cold outreach for a first client.
- A specific, narrow starter offer beats a generic hire-me pitch.
- Niche communities have less competition than general freelance marketplaces.
The first few freelance clients are the hardest, mostly because you don’t yet have testimonials or a track record to lean on. Here’s what actually works before that reputation exists.
Start with people who already know you
Former coworkers, classmates, and even friends running small businesses are far more likely to hire or refer you than a stranger, because trust is already established. This is almost always faster than cold outreach for the first client.
Do one piece of unpaid spec work strategically, not habitually
A single, targeted redesign concept for a business you would genuinely like to work with can open a door. Doing this repeatedly for random prospects, though, trains clients to expect free work and undervalues your time.
Show up in niche communities, not just general job boards
Subreddits, Discord servers, and Slack communities built around a specific niche (indie SaaS founders, local restaurant owners, etc.) tend to have less competition and higher trust than general freelance marketplaces.
Package a specific, well-defined starter offer
A generic hire-me pitch competes with everyone. A specific offer, like a fixed-fee Instagram template redesign, is far easier for a prospect to say yes to.
What to skip
Mass-applying to generic freelance marketplace job posts is usually the least efficient path early on — you’re competing on price against a huge pool of applicants with no way to stand out. The strategies above all lean on some form of existing trust or narrower competition instead.
FAQ
How do I get my first freelance design client with no portfolio?
Start with people who already know and trust you, and consider one strategic piece of unpaid spec work for a specific business you would like to work with, rather than applying broadly to job boards.
Is spec work worth doing to land clients?
A single, targeted piece for a specific prospect can work, but doing it repeatedly and habitually trains clients to expect free work and undervalues your time.