Few days back, there was a Ask HN 'How to move beyond “freelancer”?' : https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9289500
Some comments mentioned about getting projects from large companies:
pauletienney (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9289724):
- Once you have a team, you will look for interesting projects. They are more complicated to get. They often come from medium / large organization. Those orgs. have important inertia. Projects can take weeks of month to start. Chase multiple projects at the same time.
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cheetos (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9290005):
Instead, find startups with technical people doing the recruiting or large companies with established roles and processes for freelancers. They will at least understand market rates and what you actually do.
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How do we find out which companies have 'established' roles and processes for freelancers?
Also, what are some other ways to approach companies for remote projects? What techniques have you tried that seem to work : for example cold emails, picking up the phone and calling at office hours?
I understand that having people from your network in companies helps. My query is mostly related to companies where we do not have anyone from our network.
PS: We are a team of two who have been doing software consulting and development for a year, and are looking at ways to get larger, longer contracts, which we are thinking might come if we approach large companies.
Even though I was effectively hired by a senior executive (former colleague), I still had to become an approved contractor in their procurement system. They used a 3rd party (http://www.pontoonsolutions.com). So, I was instructed to make a proposal via that system -- to be clear, though, I had already negotiated everything before this even came up -- but it was a requirement to get the work.
However, once I was in, I had visibility to other work that was being put out for bid. I personally was fully booked up with work from my network in this company to take advantage of it though. My sense is that it would not be a good idea to bid blindly for these projects -- most of them were commodity IT work, not necessarily interesting projects. I found out about those from my internal networking.
So, I guess I would suggest looking at Pontoon -- seeing if there's a way into companies through 3rd parties like this.
I would also suggest just looking at giant company career sites and seeing if they have any contractor positions listed. Once you are in, you can find other projects. The easy networking you can do is with the company's recruiters (they probably call you) -- find out how they hire contractors.