I'm a software engineer and former CTO, interested in both custom development and higher level questions of technical strategy and system design. Places like Upwork don't seem geared to this type of work (unless I'm mistaken).
Is this kind of work now mostly handled by large consultancies that provide contractors, unless you have significant connections? How are you all networking and marketing yourselves in these unprecedented times?
Also, pull requests. I once fixed a crash bug in the Unreal Engine 4 and submitted a patch. Afterwards, a game studio called me. Similarly, I got contacted by an AI consultancy after I submitted a patch to TensorFlow.
Plus me and my friends do a lot of online competitions. Last year we briefly "won" Sintel, this year its Bomberland. Nothing says "this guy can do AI" better than ranking in-between FAANG teams in an AI competition.
A few years back, I landed a high-paying gig through Upwork. I think it was mostly luck and I wouldn't use the site to find clients anymore. I do use it to hire the occasional contractor though; I hired my accountant there, and have recently found a great front-end dev there as well. The issue with Upwork is that as a client, you get bombarded by dozens of generic bids and sifting through them to find a quality candidate is a chore.
Most of my work has come through recruiters, which is both a blessing (I didn't have to do any marketing) and a curse (I don't "own" the client relationships). These days I am focusing on building my online presence and finding ways to get in front of people who need my expertise.
I also blog about interesting topics in the Caribbean (which MSM rarely touches, at least in my neck of the Caribbean woods), and I use that as a convo starter when people ask me what I do (citizen journalism personally, CTO professionally), and what background I'm from (I.T. and business/commercial roles).
Hope that helps.
job posting forum: 10 (2 of them HN "Who's Hiring" posts, 1 meetup.com, 1 Google jobs, the others I don't recall but some were monster.com or indeed.com)
previous coworker: 3
previous client: 2
friend of a friend of a friend: 1
I haven't actually taken a gig found via LinkedIn, but I get inquiries from there.
I covered some of the details in this video - https://learnetto.com/tutorials/how-to-look-for-contract-wor...
I would love to hear someone's perspective on how technology blogging landed them clients