You do not need to resign tomorrow. The jump should be a plan, not a late-night decision.
"I do not want the office anymore. I already resigned. What now?"
Common question from new BFF learners
Friend, let us balance speed with stability. Although we love freelancing, I do not recommend jumping straight away. My case is different. Your situation is different. Resigning before you have a client is like jumping into a pool without knowing if there is water.
Wrong question: "When can I resign?"
Better question: "What income level and risk profile should I be able to carry before I resign?"
The question "when" often comes from anxiety. The question "what baseline" comes from strategy. The Freelancing Journey is a marathon, not a sprint. Prepare properly so you can run longer without getting hurt.
| Condition | Why it matters | Target |
|---|---|---|
| 1. First freelance income | Proof of concept. Do not resign because "I think I can do it." Show the first ₱5,000 in the bank. | First paying client landed |
| 2. Emergency fund | Keep 3 to 6 months of expenses in savings. When a dry spell comes, you will not panic. | 3-6× monthly expenses |
| 3. Retainer client minimum | Not project-only income. Aim for stable monthly income, such as a ₱20K to ₱30K minimum monthly retainer. | 1 retainer @ ₱20K+/month |
| 4. Health insurance plan | Employer-provided HMO will disappear. Buy personal HMO coverage or set aside emergency funds. | Personal HMO arranged |
| 5. Family alignment | You, your spouse, or your parents should be aligned. When panic comes, you need a support system. | Family conversation completed |
For 3 to 6 months, your office job and first freelance client may sit side by side. Yes, it is hard. Yes, it is tiring. But that bridge phase is often the most secure transition. You avoid first-month freelance panic because stable income is still present.
Some people resign after about 12 months of dual life. Others need 18 to 24 months. There is no perfect timeline. The right timeline is the one you can carry without putting your family at risk.
Every three months, a new BFF member posts something like, "I resigned today, what next?" That is the worst position: no client, no savings, and bills still coming. The pressure can push you to drop rates, sign exploitative contracts, or rush a weak portfolio. Resign with a plan, not with a feeling.
Probably already resigned. This lesson is about scaling protection.
Highest stakes. Job stability versus freelance dream.
Portfolio is the safety net. Build it strong before jumping.
Already self-employed. "Resignation" means closing/scaling shop.
Steady employee. Transition needs methodical plan.
No employment to resign from. This lesson is preview for later.
Post this in BFF Facebook Group (Work At Home Geek):
Hold steady, BFF Team. We keep going together.
– Lala