From Worker Bee to Queen Bee: Ditching the Employee Mentality in Freelancing
-

Successful freelancing requires more than doing the work. It demands stepping into multiple roles — sales, marketing, finance and strategy — all at once. Digital artist Caroline Beavon describes this shift as putting on her “boss mode” hat. Since going freelance in 2009, she’s learned to consciously switch between her creative “worker bee” mode and her strategic “Queen Bee” CEO mindset.
Some days are for pitching and networking. Others are for focused production. The balance is critical: too much worker-bee energy can dry up future opportunities, while too much executive energy can leave deliverables unfinished.
Financial structure plays a big role in maintaining that balance. Beavon keeps income in a business account and pays herself a steady salary, smoothing out leaner months and reducing stress. That buffer allows her to think long-term instead of reacting to short-term fluctuations.
Freelancers who cling to an employee mindset often fall into lopsided relationships where clients dictate terms. Edmond warns against this trap: freelancers are collaborators, not subordinates. Setting your own pricing, boundaries and processes is essential.
Breaking the employee mindset can take years, but it’s never too late. At its core, freelancing is about freedom — the ability to build a business that supports the life you actually want.
-
too much worker bee = busy and broke too much ceo mode = visionary with no deliverables
-
Freelancing is just five jobs in a trench coat pretending to be “freedom.”
-
Too much hustle = busy, stressed, still undercharging.
-
Too much vision = vibes, strategy decks, zero invoices sent.