How to Handle Rejection When Selling Your Services
By Karl Kniseley·3 min read·Updated June 2026
Every self-employed person hears no constantly, and the ones who last stop taking it personally. A no usually means wrong fit, wrong timing, or wrong budget, not that you are bad at your work. Reading it as a verdict on you is how good people talk themselves into undercharging.
Let it sharpen your aim
Instead of dropping your price after a no, ask what it taught you. Were they the wrong client? Did the offer miss? Use it to aim better next time. The goal is not to never hear no, it is to hear it from the right people and stay steady when you do.
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