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I'm a web developer and I've always been doing some personal projects to learn new technologies and keep myself busy. I also did some minor freelance work (create a website for the small association Y, for the artist Z...).

As time passes and I build up my network, skill set and resume, I get a lot more offers that could take more of my time and I'm not willing to be only a freelancer since I need to have to go to work to avoid going crazy and asocial... so I'm asking myself this question: is doing a bit of freelancing while working full time a good idea?

The obvious pros are:

  • More money
  • More experience (on time management, technologies...)
  • Possibly interesting projects

And the obvious cons are:

  • More work
  • Less personal life
  • Possibles issues such as a project that takes too much time compared to the original estimate

... but I'm sure some of you are in this situation on thought of it more than I have. So, what do you think? If given a freelance opportunity, should one turn it down because of a full time job?

Maybe there are some kind of freelancing job that I should refuse and other I should accept? How can I tell?


Bounty: Added a bounty to get more feedbacks (answers and votes on the answers) and finaly closing this question.

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+1: interesting question – Stefano Borini Jul 24 at 15:00
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I'm in a dead-end (but fun) job that hasn't given me opportunities to grow for a long time and so I consider my time learning new technology at work, browsing stackoverflow, and on semi work related tasks very critical to my career development. I do it, knowing that its not good for my company, but I am more afraid of not having skills into my next job and so I don't care. – djangofan Jul 24 at 15:17

This question has an open bounty worth 100 reputation ending in 4 days.

9 Answers

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Check your employer's policies on moonlighting, particularly in areas related to your work. If these are not favorable, you can check your local laws to see if such restrictions are legal, if you're willing to challenge your employer's policies. Bear in mind that if you use any of your employer's resources they have grounds to claim the work and all revenues from it.

As far as the time demands go, if you have too little time you can always raise your rates some. Not too far, or you'll price yourself out of the market, but raising them a little will give you more money and reduce demands on your time.

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+1 : although challenging your employer's policies can contain risk. – Andrew Jul 24 at 15:11
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+1: And also be sure to check any employment agreement you signed. – Jim Ferrans Jul 24 at 15:12
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As your employer I would be concerned if you competed with me, used my equipment, or approached my customers. But if not it is none of my business.

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I just started doing contract work on the side from my full-time job. I found out from my immediate boss that my company really frowns on "moonlighting" for software developers as it interferes with productivity, and was told not to tell anyone else.

From my experience so far it kind of does interfere with my productivity, since a lot of software development is thinking through problems. The time I used to spend thinking about work problems outside work is now consumed by my contract work, and also sometimes I can't avoid thinking of contract work problems during my full-time work hours.

I am not really doing it for the money (not that the extra money isn't nice) but because I find the contract work far more interesting. But I can't really say if it's ultimately a good idea or not. Maybe if you are the kind of programmer who can really divide your time it will be okay.

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I'm a consultant, and a few times now I've taken on side projects. I don't do it anymore.

Sometimes it isn't that big a deal, but in two cases I found myself spread way too thin and it was a source of much stress. The problem is that software projects are never just 'done' and most people end up needing support.

Make sure you have an answer to how you're going to handle that without letting somebody down - your customer, or your employer.

Or yourself, frankly. To me, my free time is just too rare and valuable these days.

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Just to add to the discussion above, be sure to check every document you may have signed with your employer. I once worked for a company that had an obscure clause in its employment contract that prohibited employees from doing outside for-profit programming, regardless of whether it was on work time or using work equipment or competing with the company. That sort of clause may not stand up in court, but I doubt you want to be the one to test it!

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If you can do it on the side and it doesn't relate to your current employment, in today's economy I don't see why not.

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Unrelated, but I love the phrase "... in today's economy". You never hear phrases like that in today's economy. – Pete Jul 24 at 15:07
In today's economy, only the top 90% are employed. Oh wait, that's not how things work? – go minimal Jul 24 at 21:45
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I see that most answers so far have focused, quite reasonably!, on not breaching any contract (or law -- jurisdictions vary greatly!) with respect to your employer's rights -- including some unwritten expectations that your employer may have. Employers' attitudes may vary greatly based on what kind of outside activity you're doing -- for example, some will look benignly at work done to help charities or other non-profits, and/or open-source work, or such things as writing programming books, being active on Stack Overflow or other programming venues, and the like -- perhaps up to the point of benignly tolerating the use of work-related resources for such activities that bring reputation and goodwill but probably not much money (I guess some technical books do make money, but typically it's not much anyway;-).

Employers are less likely to smile and nod approvingly, at the other extreme, if your freelancing is (or is perceived to be) in direct competition to the employer's business (and they're quite likely in such cases to have laws on their side, even apart from plenty of employment documents they've probably been careful to make you sign). Of course, there's a large gray area in the middle. In general, asking your manager may be a good way to get specific information on whether any specific activity would, or wouldn't, get you fired, sued, and/or otherwise penalized (formally or informally) at your place of work.

But, making sure that no official or unofficial penalties will come from your outside activities is just the beginning, of course -- the lack of such penalties is a necessary but not sufficient condition to make such outside activities worthwhile. To make them worthwhile, in addition, you need specific motivations -- such as, such burning passion for programming that you can't get enough of it at work, or fierce love for some specific technology that you don't get to use at work... and/or, a strong attachment to something good that you think will result for your programming, rather than for the programming itself.

For example, say that you'd like to volunteer some hours every week to help at your local soup kitchen -- I don't know of any employer who'd object to your doing that in your spare time! -- and after spending a while volunteering for such duties as kitchen cleaning and serving, you find out that they're spending an inordinate amount of volunteers' time to manually keep track of inventories, donations and warehousing. You consult with the folks managing the kitchen and they agree it would be great to have an inventory-tracking program running on their old beat-up PC, they just don't think there is any such program, suitable for their needs and resources, that's available for free. There may not be, but, if you used to be good at DOS programming, you could make one for them, and they'd love you to. Now what?

Now, dusting off your ancient DOS-programming skills and doing a totally mundane, text-screen inventory management application for the soup kitchen is definitely not the sexiest programming work in the world -- but then, neither is serving food and cleaning kitchens, but, they're no less needful and helpful kinds of volunteer work: here, the motivation for your "freelancing" would rather be a selfless one... using your spare hours, that you decide are available for volunteering, in the most effective way to help keeping needy people decently fed. Whether you WANT to do this, just like whether you want to do any other kind of volunteer charity work, is obviously totally up to you, but if that's the way you choose to help your community, I don't think anybody could gainsay that, and I'd be astonished if an employer did (though, again, checking w/your manager is still advisable).

Sure, it IS more work and less "personal life" -- just like any other charity volunteer work you might be doing -- and it would be very wrong to express any disapproval of people who choose NOT to spend any of their time this way, and would rather relax, chill out, spend time with friends... perfectly natural and normal preferences. But, if your choice IS to devote some time and energy to volunteer work, programming may in some cases be a way you can leverage your specific skills to be most helpful and effective in your volunteering.

Other motivations you bring into play, such as learning new technologies, could also be combined with non-profit work in some cases (e.g. you could do the inventory app as a way to learn Google App Engine -- as long as that old PC can run a browser and has net access, that might actually work better than running it locally, AND give you a chance to learn GAE which you might not get at work). Only "making more money" seems to be a desire you could satisfy exclusively with commercial engagements... and I suspect it's also the one that's likeliest to put you in trouble with your employer. Unless you're really hurting for more money (in which case looking for a new job or finding out what you'd need to do at your current one to get a promotion and a raise might be safer and more effective approaches), I do recommend you consider opportunities that can give you "everything except" the "more money" bit!-)

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Support is the main problem IMO, your customers will want responsive support in case of problems, but you wont be able to because you'll be at your day job.

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It sounds to me like you've already done some good thinking on the idea. I'd say first you have to figure who you need to please and how much you care about pleasing them. For example there is:

  • Yourself - if you enjoy it, good, if work is quite enough time on the computer, that's a strong point against freelancing, which will increase not only your computer time, but also possibly your stress levels.
  • Your work - whatever arrangement you've made with your work, you should abide by, or find a new place to work, so if you've signed away your right to work an outside job or if you need to notify your work before taking on additional paying gigs, do as you're obligated to do.
  • Your family - how much time are they OK with you giving up? How does it also impact other things you do or want to do? For example, if your family works OK with you not being around 1 night a week, do you have to choose between a good poker game and freelancing? See first bullet about pleasing yourself.
  • Your freelance customer - will they be happy with the amount of time you have to put in?

And that brings me to the next point -- you can make a freelance job whatever you want it to be, provided you're not relying on the income. There may be freelance jobs out there that are OK with long deadlines, so that you have the flexibility to get the job done slowly, while work or family takes higher priority.

A customer may be very happy to have you working only a limited number of hours if they know that ahead of time. For some customers, it can be a win-win if the customer doesn't have a lot of money to throw in your direction, they might favor a cheap-and-slow approach. The thing is, you want to be clear. I'd suggest figuring out your limits and then communicating the following before you commit to a job:

  • how many hours a week you can work regularly on the project
  • how many hours a week you can work in a crunch of 1-3 weeks (with the understanding that "crunch" is not a regular state of affairs, and you need some heads up to pull it off)
  • your estimate on how many hours the job will take and thus when you'll be done with it.
  • your thought on how predictable your estimate is - for example, if it's technology you know well the estimate is likely to be very accurate, but if you've never used the technology before, your estimate could be 50% higher or lower.
  • how often they can see some sort of output (agile evolutions, waterfall artifacts, prototypes, web site updates, etc - whatever seems appropriate).

If you've got a good rep and you're a good communicator, I think it's quite likely that you'll find customers willing to work under your conditions. Just be sure you keep them in the loop as things change - so that you have a fair balance between life and work.

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