general
How to Get Your First Freelance Digital Marketing Client (A Conversation)
Article written by
Vismaya
6 min
2026-05-06

"I want to freelance but I have no clients."
Name five businesses you interact with regularly. Restaurants, salons, shops, your gym, a friend's startup. Anything.
"Okay. My barber. The restaurant near my house. My cousin's boutique. My old college's coaching centre. And a bakery I go to."
Have you ever looked at any of their Google Business Profiles?
"No."
Good. Open Google Maps right now. Search for your barber's shop the way a stranger would — "men's salon near [area]." Tell me what comes up.
"He's not in the results at all. Three other salons show up though."
Those three salons are getting every customer who searches. Your barber is invisible. Now open his GBP directly — search his shop name.
"It exists but... 4 photos. All blurry. Hours say closed on Monday but he's open on Mondays. 6 reviews, last one from a year ago."
You just did an audit. In two minutes. You found three problems that are actively costing him customers. Write those three things down. Then do the same for the restaurant, the boutique, the coaching centre, and the bakery. Check their GBP, their website on mobile, their Instagram. Write one page per business — three problems, three fixes.
"Then what?"
Walk into the barber shop next time you go for a haircut. Say: "I've been studying digital marketing and I checked your Google listing out of curiosity. Found a few things that could help. Want to see?"
"Won't that be awkward?"
It'll be awkward for 10 seconds. Then he'll be curious. Everyone wants to know what people see when they Google their business. Show him the three problems. Explain what each one means in simple language — "when someone searches 'salon near me,' you don't show up because of this, this, and this."
"And if he asks me to fix it?"
That's your first client. Don't charge ₹50,000 for a retainer. Charge ₹5,000 to fix the GBP — upload real photos, correct the hours, set up proper categories, write the business description, populate the Q&A section. It takes you a few hours. He gets a profile that actually works. You get paid, you get a case study, and you get to ask him one question when you're done.
"What question?"
"Do you know any other business owners who might want this?"
Your barber talks to 20 people a day. If he's happy, he'll mention you. That's your second and third client. Not from Upwork. Not from LinkedIn. From a ₹5,000 job you did well for someone who trusts you.
"What if he says no?"
Then try the restaurant. Or the boutique. Or the coaching centre. You have five audits. You need one yes. The odds are in your favour because you're not selling — you're showing someone a problem they didn't know they had, and offering to fix it for less than they spend on a newspaper ad.
"Should I build a website first? A portfolio?"
No. Your portfolio is empty right now. A website showcasing nothing is worse than no website. Get the first client. Do the work. Document the before and after — screenshots of the old GBP vs the new one, the review count at start vs after one month. That documented result IS your portfolio. Build the website after you have something to put on it.
"How long before this becomes real income?"
If you start this weekend, you could have your first paying client within 2 weeks. Three to five clients within 2-3 months — each paying ₹5,000-₹15,000 for small, specific projects. That's ₹25,000-₹75,000/month from work you found by walking around your neighbourhood and paying attention.
It doesn't scale to ₹5 lakh/month at this stage. It scales to proof. Proof scales to bigger clients. Bigger clients scale to real income. The barber's GBP is the first domino.
"What if I'm not good enough yet?"
You just found three problems in two minutes that a business owner has never noticed in five years. You're good enough to start. Nobody's good enough to be an expert on day one. But you're good enough to be useful. That's all the first client requires.
Go audit five businesses this weekend. Then come back and tell me which one said yes.
Opening Hours
Mon - Fri 9AM - 8PM
Sat - Sun 10AM - 5PM
“Beware of little expenses, a small leak will sink a great ship”
— Benjamin Franklin

“Beware of little expenses, a small leak will sink a great ship”
— Benjamin Franklin

Copyright © WizGrowth Inc. 2026