A Freelance Designer's Guide to Presenting Work to Clients
A client presentation should end with a decision, not a show-and-tell. The core question is simple: what do you need the client to approve, choose, or confirm today?
Browse 3 Gruv blog articles tagged Communication Skills. Coverage includes Business Structure & Compliance. Practical guides, examples, and checklists for cross-border payments, tax, compliance, invoicing, and global operations.
A client presentation should end with a decision, not a show-and-tell. The core question is simple: what do you need the client to approve, choose, or confirm today?
For freelancers, the conversations that matter most are not abstract leadership exercises. They are the calls and messages where a client asks for more than the agreed scope, pays late, misses approvals, questions quality, or wants urgent work without changing the budget. That is the setting here. Not theory, but decisions that affect cash flow, delivery, and trust.
**Set the rules before the first draft lands.** If you want remote feedback to lead to clean revisions instead of crossed wires, settle the process before anyone starts reviewing. At kickoff, the target is simple: one scoped document, one approved place for feedback, and one clear approval path.