Every day I see videos telling graphic designers, video editors, and developers they'll soon be driving Ferraris just by opening Fiverr or Upwork. The reality is far less glamorous. You're competing with millions of people worldwide, many with years of experience, established reviews, and lower prices. Landing your first client can take months, and earning a stable income is even harder. Freelancing is a real career, but social media has turned it into a get-rich-quick dream. We celebrate the 1% who make six figures and ignore the thousands who struggle to get a single gig. Maybe instead of selling the Ferrari fantasy, we should be talking more about building skills, patience, networking, and treating freelancing like a business rather than a shortcut. What do you think? Is freelancing still a realistic path to financial freedom in Nigeria, or has the internet oversold the dream?
1 Comments
I got my first Fiverr client after eight months. It wasn't easy, but now freelancing pays my bills. The problem is influencers make it look like success happens in 30 days.
That's exactly the kind of story we need more of. Eight months is a lot more realistic than "I made $10k in my first month" videos that set impossible expectations.
Freelancing isn't dead, but platforms like Upwork and Fiverr aren't beginner-friendly anymore. You're competing against people with thousands of reviews. Cold outreach and networking work much better today.