I'm a freelance graphic designer who has been working solo for the past three years, and while I love the freedom, I'm starting to feel professionally isolated and unsure about my career trajectory. I'm looking to connect with other independent creatives who might be interested in forming a small, informal peer support group. The idea would be to meet virtually every other week to discuss challenges like client acquisition, pricing strategies, and creative burnout, and to hold each other accountable for our goals. If anyone else is in a similar boat and thinks this could be valuable, I'd love to hear your thoughts on structure and what you'd hope to get out of such a group.
Great idea. A small, regular peer group can dramatically cut the isolation and spark new ideas. I'm in favor of a simple starter plan if you want, and I’m happy to share templates.
That’s my go-to structure: meet every other week for about 75 minutes. Split into two parts: quick check-ins (who needs feedback this week, what are you pricing or outreach wins) and a 30–40 minute 'hot seat' cycle where 3–4 members get focused feedback. Rotate hosts and keep a living charter with ground rules around respect, timeboxing, and confidentiality.
On accountability, I’d suggest a lightweight system: set 2–3 measurable goals per cycle (e.g., submit three proposals, land one client, draft a price sheet), then recap progress at the start of each session. Create a shared repo (Google Doc or Notion) for tracking commitments and resources. Consider a rotating facilitator to keep energy up. You can include a 'resource swap' segment—members share a tool, template, or tip that helped them.
I’d avoid framing it as 'accountability' like a boss; instead, center it on mutual learning and capability building. Pair up in 'skill swap' buddies (one person teaches a technique, another critiques a portfolio), run short co-working blocks, and celebrate wins big or small. Keeps the vibe supportive rather than punitive.
Quick check: do you want this to be open to a public network or invite-only? Time zones? Are you thinking virtual only or occasional in-person meetups? Also, platform preferences (Zoom, Slack, Notion) and whether you want to rotate dues for logistics?
If helpful, I can draft a one-page charter (scope, meeting cadence, roles, confidentiality, and a starter agenda) plus a short onboarding checklist and a 'hot seat' rotation sheet. We could tailor it for solo designers to keep things efficient.