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Assumptions in the Freelance Proposal Business

One challenge I encounter when I do freelance writing for solo entrepreneurs, small businesses, and nonprofit organizations is an assumptions gap. This gap can create problems early or later in the relationship, depending on how quickly the problems arise.

For example, someone might hire me as a proposal writer and then assume that I know everything there is to know about the proposal business, including how to write for their business. This is a risk because the proprietor or hiring manager assumes–wrongly–that I will be able to set up a proposal operation on my own with little or no guidance…or worse, without any information from them to populate those proposals (“Can’t you just make it up?”).

This is why it is important during the interview process to ask questions about the employer’s business:

In addition to the content side, you need to understand their process, including how much autonomy you’ve been granted to do the work:

There are other questions, but both sets of bullets or questions like them should be asked up front. Otherwise, you could find yourself hired without any ground rules established and disappointment arising on both sides of the relationship:

“Why didn’t someone call me and tell me what to do?”
“Why didn’t you just start working?”

The more clarity you get up front, the less stress you’ll have once you’re hired. Trust me on this.

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