How to get your first client

Jan 26, 2026

By Jeremy Mura

December is the best time to focus on improving your business. Systems, templates... these things help your design biz run like a well oiled machine.

I’ve been exactly where you are, looking for a freelance gig.

Confused, scrolling job boards, wondering if everyone else knows a secret to getting a real client.

First, a reality check.

Marketplaces like Fiverr, Upwork, Freelancer are not broken.  

They’re just not designed for beginners to win easily.  

People who started earlier have more reviews and have more projects to show they will beat you.

In the past I used sites like these early on I would just undercut and charge low amounts to get clients then gather reviews, which helped me get more projects.

Long term it wasn’t sustainable because most projects on these sites are cheap.

Unless you are in the top %1 they get large projects which takes years to build.

Where do beginners actually find their first design, brand or UI freelance client?

Almost never on job boards.

Beginners get their first clients from proximity, not platforms.

That means:

People already around you.

People who already trust you a little.

People who don’t need the “perfect” designer yet.

Real places beginners actually win:

• Small local businesses with bad websites

• Solo founders building their first MVP

• Agencies that have too much work and need overflow help

• Friends, family, friends of friends

• Early stage startups on Twitter, Indie Hackers, LinkedIn

 

The key shift is this.

Stop trying to be “hireable”.

Start being helpful.

Stop being desperate.  

Start being valuable.

If someone has a broken onboarding flow, poor mobile layout, confusing landing page, that’s an entry point.  

You don’t need permission to notice problems.

Your first client doesn’t come from applying.

 They come from showing initiative.

Are there any free platforms, communities, or unconventional ways that worked?

Yes, but only if you show up as a human, not a lurker.

Free places that actually work if used properly:

• Twitter and LinkedIn, commenting thoughtfully on founders’ posts

• Indie Hackers, especially people sharing new product launches

• Discord and Slack communities around startups or no code tools

• Local business Facebook groups

• Design communities where agencies hang out, not just students

The unconventional part is this.

Don’t pitch.

Instead:

• Share small UI improvements

• Redesign one screen and explain why

• Post teardown threads

• Show before and afters

When people see how you think, they start asking questions.  

That’s how work starts.

Is cold DMing founders or startups worth it?

Yes. But most people do it terribly.

Cold DMing only works when it’s specific and useful.

Bad cold DM:

“Hey I’m a UI UX designer looking for work.”

That’s not going to work

Good cold DM:

“I noticed your signup flow asks for too much upfront. I redesigned a simpler version that could increase completion. Happy to walk you through it.”

One is begging.

The other is value.

It’s about relevance, and if you are on someone's radar. That's why following someone and engaging on the posts so you are constantly showing up in feed.

Or just asking to collaborate or connect with no sales intended just to connect.

You might send 10 messages and get 1 reply. That’s normal.  

One decent project is enough to move you forward.

Content is the only other way to attract leads but I talk about this in my freelance course.

Should you focus on unpaid or low paid projects first?

Yes, but with rules.

Unpaid work is only useful if:

• The project looks real  

• You control the outcome

• You can turn it into a strong case study for your portfolio

• You set boundaries like a paid project

What you should avoid:

• Endless “volunteer” work

• Clients who don’t respect your time

• Projects with no clear outcome

A better option than “free” is:

• Small paid projects

• Fixed scope

• Clear deliverables

 

Even $200 to $500 projects change how clients treat you and how you see yourself.

 

Credibility doesn’t come from money alone.

 

It comes from showing process, thinking, and results.

 

What would I do differently if I were starting today?

 

I’d stop chasing permission.

 

I’d do three things immediately.

 

1. Niche early. Not forever, just for now.

Pick one type of product or client and design for them relentlessly.

You can go broad later on once you have work under your belt.

2. Build fewer case studies, but deeper ones.

Explain the problem. The decisions. The trade offs. Clients care about thinking, not screens.

3. Talk publicly about what I’m learning.

Post breakdowns. 

Share mistakes. 

Document progress.

Visibility compounds faster than silent grinding.

One last thing that matters more than tools, platforms, or portfolios.

Momentum.

Your goal is not to “be ready”.

Your goal is to be in motion.

One conversation.

One small project.

One real interaction.

That’s how this phase ends.

And it does end, if you keep moving forward deliberately.

Have a beautiful week.
Jeremy

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