The Most Lucrative Ways to Specialize
This post was originally published on . It is reposted with permission.听
Yes. Specialists always do better. There is no debating this.
I can鈥檛 think of听any听freelancer听who made it big as a handyman.
The world already has plenty of all-purpose copywriters, versatile translators, general web designers and utility infielders. Don鈥檛 jump into that haystack. You will be lost forever.
It sounds paradoxical, but听the longer your 鈥榣ist of services鈥, the broader your 鈥榚xpertise鈥 the听less听skillful and useful you appear. And the lower your fees will go.
鈥淏ut I really can do all that鈥澨you say. Maybe, but clients won鈥檛 believe it, and certainly won鈥檛 be considering you top tier. It looks like you鈥檙e flailing, hoping to hit something.
If 鈥榙oing everything鈥 were the key to riches, the superstars would do be doing everything. They most definitely听are not.
Write this down:
This freelance thing听screams听to be practiced narrow and deep
Narrow听meaning you stake out your private territory, even if it鈥檚 the size of a beach towel, and then听own听it. You鈥檙e not trying to cover all bases, appeal to everyone, do everything.听You have听your听thing.
And听deep听meaning you dig into your patch of turf until you hit bedrock. Then no generalist can uproot you. You become the best in the hemisphere at what you do. You know more, and do it happier, faster and more elegantly than any freelancer trying to be a twelve-bladed Swiss army knife.
That鈥檚 precisely how every high-earning, always-busy freelancer does it. All of them work surprisingly limited territories.
Jonathan Mann just听writes clever songs. My designer friend Dave became famous for doing Annual Reports. Writer Hugh MacCleod draws cartoons听on the back of business听cards. There鈥檚 a carpenter in the next town who makes custom, hand-crafted staircases and nothing else. He earns four times the usual carpenter money.
When I was a 鈥榞eneric鈥 copywriter, no one called me back. When I was a writer who could handle gnarly high-tech networking services, they wanted to talk. Well, more often than usual anyway.
The worst path is to be migrant labor, a warm-body freelancer: Sit here, make this. It pays $5.
Better to be the indispensable genius. The听only听one who can can untangle this knot, or make this particular frog sing.
That way, clients听ask听you what to do, not听tell听you what to do.
Start here
First thing. Don鈥檛 fear 鈥榣imiting yourself鈥. That鈥檚 newbie thinking. It took me听years听to get over that.
Unless you have 973 clients right now, you are听already听limiting yourself to a tiny niche. (Once, I specialized in 鈥榮mall business owners who didn鈥檛 care a lick about marketing, but sort of felt sorry for me.鈥) 听The trick is to find a specialty that pays better, has more legs. Adding more stuff听never听does it.
Besides, all you need are听. Not the whole world. If you find twenty fans, you can retire early.
Next, you don鈥檛 have to pick your personal niche today. Noodle around, try different things. See what gets attention. If an idea doesn鈥檛 draw a crowd, fold your tent and move on. You鈥檙e freelance. You鈥檙e allowed to听do that.
Often, a specialty will find听you.听Don鈥檛 be sleeping when it comes looking.
And听no rule says you have to work听one听idea at a time. For years I carried three sets of business cards: 鈥楽criptwriter鈥, 鈥楥opywriter鈥, 鈥楳arketing鈥.听For about $150, you can have three different websites up and running. See which one rings the bell.
The overriding idea: You鈥檙e specializing to catapult yourself nine rungs above the competition 鈥 or effectively听eliminate听competition. You do not want to appear interchangeable with 26 other freelancers. That鈥檚 what causes low rates and getting fired.
You鈥檙e specializing so that it鈥檚听far听easier to find clients, and for clients to find you. You鈥檙e specializing so you can say something more meaningful than 鈥淗ello. I design beautiful websites.鈥 You鈥檙e specializing so you know exactly who your best clients are and where they hang out.
You鈥檙e specializing so you can charge more.
Try any or all of these:
Go with what you听like听most,听what moves you.听The advantage is, you鈥檒l care about what you鈥檙e doing. You鈥檒l be having fun, feeling good. Is there a business in that? Maybe, maybe not. Try it and see.
Suzanne Shelton听was doing marketing communications, just like 17,308 others. Nothing much happened. Then she decided to work听only听on projects involving sustainability and energy efficiency. She cares deeply about that, knows听gigawatts听more about the issues. Yes, making the transition was a bitch, it was scary. But now she is the expert in that realm. She gives twenty speeches a year.
Go with what you鈥檙e naturally听good听at.听Even if it doesn鈥檛 give you goosebumps. You鈥檒l have an unfair advantage by virtue of your DNA and heritage. Milk the hell out of that. Skip what you suck at.
Go with what clients always ask for. Even if makes you yawn at first.
Nancy Duarte听and her husband had a nice design business. Like everyone else, they did a little of everything. Then business tanked and they struggled. But a few clients still asked about presentations. In the design world, presentations were tacky stuff, a backwater. But the Duartes said okay. They embraced presentations with both arms. And they raised presentations to high art. Now, that鈥檚听all听they do. And they鈥檙e famous for it. They are quoted, sought out. They need staff to handle all the work.
Go with a subject matter. A field of knowledge.听This works best for writers, for translators, maybe for coders and consultants. When you know the intricacies of pharmaceuticals, regulatory affairs, healthcare, secure e-commerce, international finance, food technology, you are miles ahead of the generalist. Plus you know exactly how to Google for clients. And you can talk to them intelligently.
I once worked several projects that forced me to learn about arcane areas of liability insurance. (No, it鈥檚 not as glamorous as it sounds.) But one afternoon I sent twenty emails to companies in that business. I received ten responses in a couple of days. Suddenly I wasn鈥檛 just some faceless writer. I was some faceless writer who could talk about 鈥榮elling into the soft market in financial D&O.鈥 I didn鈥檛 pursue that niche for long for fear of irreparable brain damage. But the principle is sound.
Go with a type of business.听Much like above. Your claim to fame is that you work with telecom firms, or not-for-profits, banks, universities, publishers, franchises, toy designers, management consultants, or whatever. They鈥檙e easy to find. You get to know their problems, their quirks, what they like. But almost听never听is 鈥榮mall business鈥 a profitable speciality.
Go with a style, a voice, a philosophy.听This is good for writers, journalists, designers, illustrators. Don鈥檛 pretend to be versatile and flexible. Lean hard on your natural style and inclinations.
You鈥檙e a minimalist, or irreverent, or retro, or ultra-conservative? Be the most distinctive, the most unapologetic of your kind.
You are old-school, persnickety, or snarky? Take a stand, espouse a point of view. Evangelize what you believe. The wishy-washy middle goes nowhere, pays nothing.
Go with a technology or a medium.听You do only YouTube videos. You translate advertising, marketing, or government publications. You work in WordPress, or Joomla, or Drupal. You write only speeches. You develop GPS-based iPhone apps. You illustrate with black crayon and watercolors. (I鈥檓 making this up.) You only do type-based animation. You create听multi-layered cello听compositions.
The idea is, whatever you pick, you become听unbeatable听at. Because that is all you do.
Stake out some turf. Own it.
About the author

Walt Kania writes about freelance life and thriving on your own at .听