Organizing Client Research as a Freelancer with Markwise
Organizing Client Research as a Freelancer with Markwise
When you freelance, every new client means a new pile of research. Competitor websites, brand guidelines, reference designs, technical documentation, content examples, style guides. Multiply that by four or five active clients and your browser bookmarks turn into a junk drawer nobody wants to open.
The core problem is simple: freelancers need project-level organization with the ability to search across everything. Markwise gives you both.
One Space Per Client
Spaces are the foundation of how freelancers stay organized in Markwise. Each Space acts as a dedicated research folder for a single client or project.
Step 1: When you land a new client, create a Space with their name or project name. "Acme Corp Redesign," "BlogCo Content Strategy," or whatever makes sense.
Step 2: As you do your initial research, save everything into that Space. Competitor sites, design inspiration, technical references, the client's existing pages, relevant case studies. Use the Chrome extension to save links in two clicks.
Step 3: When you sit down to work on that client's project, open their Space. Everything you've gathered is right there, organized and searchable.
Step 4: When the project wraps up, the Space stays as an archive. If the client comes back six months later, all your original research is intact.
Research Workflows by Freelance Type
Different types of freelancers research differently. Here's how Spaces work for each.
For Freelance Designers
You're redesigning a SaaS dashboard. Your research Space might contain:
- The client's current site and competitor sites
- Dribbble and Behance references for dashboard UI patterns
- Articles about data visualization best practices
- Component library documentation (Radix, shadcn, Material UI)
- Color palette and typography inspiration links
When the client asks "why did you choose that chart layout?", you open the Space and show them the three reference articles that informed your decision.
For Freelance Developers
You're building an API integration for a client. Your Space contains:
- The third-party API documentation
- Stack Overflow threads about common integration pitfalls
- GitHub repos with similar implementations
- The client's existing codebase documentation
- Blog posts about error handling patterns for that specific API
For Freelance Writers
You're producing a series of blog posts for a B2B company. Your Space holds:
- Competitor content for tone and topic analysis
- Industry reports and data sources for citations
- The client's existing content and style guide
- SEO keyword research pages
- Reference articles that nail the voice you're aiming for
Searching Across All Clients
Sometimes you remember saving something useful but can't remember which client project it was for. Maybe you bookmarked a great article about API rate limiting during the Acme project, and now you need it for a different client.
Markwise's default search looks across all your Spaces. Just type what you're looking for, and it will surface results from every project. The semantic search understands context, so searching "handling API throttling" will find that rate limiting article even if those exact words weren't in the title.
This cross-project search becomes more valuable the longer you freelance. After a year of saving research, you've built a personal knowledge base that makes every new project faster to start.
Tagging for Cross-Client Patterns
Beyond Spaces, tags let you create cross-cutting categories that span multiple clients.
Useful tags for freelancers:
- "inspiration" for design references you might reuse
- "pricing-research" for competitor pricing pages (helpful when setting your own rates)
- "process" for articles about freelance workflows and tools
- "portfolio-worthy" for case studies and examples at the quality level you're targeting
Tags and Spaces work together. A link lives in one client Space but can have multiple tags that connect it to broader themes in your work.
A Real Scenario: Juggling Three Clients
It's Monday morning. You have three active projects:
- Open the "Fintech App" Space, review the API docs and mockup references you saved last week, and finish the payment flow design
- Switch to the "Health Blog" Space after lunch, pull up the medical sources you bookmarked for fact-checking, and write the draft
- End the day in the "E-commerce Rebuild" Space, where your Shopify API docs and competitor analysis are waiting
No context bleed. No wasted time hunting through a giant bookmark list. Each project is its own clean workspace.
Getting Started
The setup takes five minutes. Install the Chrome extension, create a Space for each active client, and start saving as you research. Within a week, you'll wonder how you managed without it.
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