Let's be honest: most proposals on freelance platforms smell like AI. And experienced clients can spot it from the first sentence.
I know because I've been a client too ๐
Deadly mistakes to avoid:
- "I'm John, I have 10 years of experience, I'm the perfect choice" โ dead on arrival
- Same proposal for every project โ clients aren't stupid
- Empty phrases like "I will give my best effort" โ everyone says that
- Overly long proposals โ nobody reads a novel
The fix โ from real experience:
1. Hook them in the first sentence ๐ฃ
Instead of: "Hi, I'm a web developer..."
Say: "Your project addresses problem X, and to be honest โ I haven't done this exact thing before. But I spent the last week researching everything about it so I can deliver the best result."
2. Radical honesty ๐ฃ๏ธ
You CAN tell a client "I haven't done this before" without losing them. Honesty builds more trust than fake claims. But back it up: "I read, researched, learned, and I'm ready to start."
3. Reference a specific detail from their project ๐
"I noticed you want this on Dropbox instead of AWS โ great choice. I've worked with Dropbox integrations before."
When a client sees you actually read their project, you're ahead of 90% of applicants.
4. Ask a smart question โ
"Do you have the main content ready, or would you like me to write it from scratch?"
A smart question shows domain expertise. It proves you're not copy-pasting.
5. Use your natural voice ๐ฃ๏ธ
Don't sound like a corporate robot. Write like you talk to a friend. Clients want a real human, not a script.
Final advice:
It's not shameful to say you lack experience. The shame is not researching. Say it with confidence:
"This is new to me, but I spent two weeks learning everything about it. Ready to start tomorrow โ and I'll deliver results." ๐ฅ