I am working on my own company that sells a news API. We've launched a month ago, it's fully bootstrapped. I have money for a few more months but at some time might search for a "job".
Does anyone here works as a "self-employed" consultant?
How do you find your clients?
Always one at a time and usually painfully if you have to ask. Clients are generally a lemon market. Good clients (well paying with realistic expectations — born of professional experience —and regular work flow) already have a list of consultants who meet their needs and with whom they have working relationships. By default almost any client you encounter as a new consultant will be lacking in some or all of wherewithal to pay, realistic expectations, and experience. Sure sometimes they have lots of work but it will tend to be bad projects.
To put it another way there is not a lot of unmet demand for consulting and building a client list takes many years of relationship building, sufficient capitalization and luck.
Luck because clients come one by one. And the world is full of buses. Most people didn’t appreciate Charlie. Because we had this in common we understood each other in a particular way and could cut out a metric ton of bullshit and just work together. Charlie ran a growing retail company and had several decades experience. There were lots of viable future projects of the type I was cut out for. A really good fit.
A few months in Charlie abruptly retired to his farm with an aggressive brain cancer. Dead six months later. That was my luck. It wasn’t good just better than Charlie’s.
http://typicalprogrammer.com/how-to-start-freelancing-and-ge...
However, if a client likes you they can hire out outside of the recruiter (usually by paying off the recruiter for the option.) I've gotten hired for a few jobs like this and then I had a network of clients in my niche who got me more work by word of mouth, without any recruiter involvment.
Other jobs I've gotten by simply being prepared for pure luck to happen, like the time when my landscaper said that his full-time employer needed an app. I already had my LLC setup, I had contract document templates ready to be filled in and signed. I had business cards. A single page static website to describe my capabilities. After taking some notes and spending a weekend building it - I walked into their office with a rough prototype of what I heard that they needed and after a second meeting I locked them in for a year contract at $90/hour. (The recruiters were giving me $50/$60 per hour and probably collecting $90-$150! (they don't really tell you).)