Honest levels make you trustworthy and easy to match. Here is how to decide what is what.
"If I call everything expert I look stronger. If I am honest I look weaker. So which do I do?"
A trap that catches almost everyone
Honest, always. Inflated skill claims fall apart the moment a client tests them, and they will. A clear, honest level makes you trustworthy and easy to place. I label every skill on my list as expert or intermediate, and that honesty is part of why clients believe the rest.
Wrong question: "How do I make my skills sound the most impressive?"
Better question: "How do I describe my skills so a client knows exactly what they are getting?"
Impressive-but-wrong loses the job in week one. Honest-and-clear keeps it for years.
| Label | Use it when |
|---|---|
| Expert | You have done this for real clients or real projects, repeatedly, and you could teach the basics to someone else. You are not nervous when asked to do it cold. |
| Intermediate | You can do it and have done it a few times, but you still look things up and would not call yourself fast yet. Most growing skills live here, and that is good. |
| Leave it off | You watched a tutorial once. Listing it invites a question you cannot answer. Move it to a "learning" note instead. |
Clients hire honest intermediates over fake experts. An honest intermediate who learns fast is a safe bet. A fake expert is a risk they will discover. Your honesty is a selling point, so use it on purpose.
Hold steady, BFF Team. We keep going together.
– Lala