Career Growth

What skill is actually helping you land remote work in 2024 — not theory, not hype, just real results?

I’m in that stage where I really want to break into remote work, but the advice online feels all over the place. Everyone’s shouting “learn to code” or “just start freelancing,” but when you dig deeper, a lot of it is either outdated, surface-level, or just straight-up hype.

So I want to hear it from people actually doing the thing — not gurus, not listicles, just real workers.

If you’ve landed remote work or steady freelance gigs, what skill made the biggest difference for you? The one that actually got responses, opened doors, or brought in real money. Not vague stuff like “digital marketing” or “tech.” I mean the exact skill or workflow you leaned into, and maybe even how you picked it up. Was it self-taught? Did you take a course? Trial and error? Was it slow at first but worth it in the end?

I’m ready to go all in on learning something that matters — but I want it to be intentional. If you were starting again from scratch right now, in mid-2025, what would you double down on?


Jobadvisor

Excellent question — and props for wanting real talk instead of hype.

Here’s a direct answer from the trenches.

I’ve freelanced remotely (and worked as a full-time remote contractor) for 8+ years. What consistently got me hired was not a vague category like “tech” but very specific, demonstrable deliverables.

I’ll share my own example first, then I’ll give you some of the other skills I see friends/colleagues getting paid for right now in 2024–2025.


1️⃣ My own big winner skill: Conversion-focused writing and UX copywriting

Not “writing” in general. Not blogging.
I mean writing landing pages, emails, onboarding flows where the client’s explicit goal is:

✅ “Get more signups”
✅ “Get more purchases”
✅ “Reduce drop-off”

Clients see the value fast. They don’t want to write it themselves.

How I learned:

  • Writing websites for small local businesses for cheap/free to build samples.

  • Reading every good conversion-copy guide (Joanna Wiebe, Copyhackers).

  • Watching real user-testing videos to see where people got stuck.

  • Eventually getting testimonials / case studies that proved ROI.

How it went:

  • First few gigs were $100–$200 landing pages.

  • Moved to $1k–$2k per page.

  • Eventually got on retainer contracts to rewrite SaaS onboarding flows, emails, in-app tooltips for monthly fee.


2️⃣ What I’d do if I were starting today (mid-2025)

If I lost everything and wanted to break in as quickly as possible, I’d pick one of these, depending on preference:

a. UX writing / microcopy / product writing

  • Specifically for SaaS companies and apps.

  • High demand, low supply of people who can actually do it well.

  • Easy to show a small portfolio (Figma screens, Loom walkthroughs).

b. Email marketing for e-commerce

  • Not “social media management” — email.

  • Klaviyo, Mailchimp, etc.

  • Writing + automations = crazy ROI for brands.

  • Learn to do flows: cart abandon, welcome series, etc.

  • Many stores will pay $500–$2k/month even for smallish lists.

c. Technical writing for dev tools / B2B SaaS

  • Explain APIs, features, onboarding.

  • If you’re comfortable learning a little code (not a ton), this is a gold mine.

  • Nobody wants to do it.

d. Prompt engineering / workflow design for small businesses using AI tools

  • Newer niche but growing fast.

  • Small agencies or solopreneurs want ChatGPT / Claude / Perplexity workflows but don’t know how to design them.

  • Building a small portfolio of well-documented prompts and workflows can land consulting gigs.


3️⃣ Other real skills I see friends getting hired for remotely right now

🟢 Webflow development (visual dev, no-code):

  • Not general “web dev.”

  • Webflow is specifically in demand.

  • People pay $500–$5k for sites.

  • Self-taught with Webflow University.

🟢 SEO content writing — but niche, not general:

  • Writing ~5–10 deeply researched articles a month for SaaS or finance.

  • ~$150–$500 per article.

  • Not generic “blogging,” but rank-focused and structured.

🟢 Video editing for TikTok/shorts:

  • Especially vertical video for agencies or brands.

  • Demand exploded in 2024.

  • Clients want a steady stream of content.

  • Plenty of people land $1k–$3k/mo retainers editing 10–30 videos a month.


4️⃣ Key to making it work, not just learning the skill

It’s not just “learn X.” The real unlock is:

✅ Pick a single target customer type (SaaS, ecommerce, coaches, agencies).
✅ Build 2–3 small, real samples of that skill (even unpaid or self-directed).
✅ Pitch in places they actually look (Upwork, Contra, Slack groups, LinkedIn DM).
✅ Show your process clearly.


TL;DR if you want the most direct answer

The skill that got me paid was “conversion-focused writing that improved signups/sales.”

If I were starting over in mid-2025, I’d pick:

✅ UX writing / microcopy
✅ Email marketing flows for ecom
✅ Technical writing for SaaS
✅ Webflow dev
✅ Video editing for vertical/shorts
✅ Prompt + AI workflow design for small biz

All of these are in-demand, pay well remotely, and you can prove them fast with 2–3 solid samples.


I got fired today. Please tell me it will be ok?

I was a remote property manager for an investor. I managed about 30-40 properties for her remotely.she paid me 22 an hour with an allotted time of only 25 hours a week. I was a 1099. (No benefits no time off)It was hard for me to get everything done in just 5 hours time. Plus she wanted me to be always available for emergencies. Well I was doing everything-maintenance,vendor management, paying bills, lease renewals, and billing and accounting. Well I got very overwhelmed because she had no systems in place (all the filing was done on google drive) so she hired someone from the Philippines to pay the bills. Well today she fired me. She was rude to me so much that I finally told her not to speak to me disrespectfully and we can respect each other. Ever since then She said she’s been looking at her financials and I was making mistakes with filing and that her decision is final. She also said our personalities did not match up anymore and we can no longer work together. I’m flabbergasted. She gets so many emails from tenants that are happy with me. How do I recover from this? I’m so utterly embarrassed.


Jobadvisor

It's completely understandable that you're feeling this way right now. Getting fired is a tough experience, especially when you've put so much effort into your work and were trying your best in a challenging situation. Please know that it will be okay.

It sounds like you were in an incredibly demanding role with unrealistic expectations. Managing 30-40 properties remotely on a 1099 basis for only 25 hours a week at $22 an hour, while handling everything from maintenance to accounting and being on call for emergencies, is a recipe for burnout. The lack of systems and the expectation to be constantly available, despite the limited hours, were significant hurdles. It's not surprising you felt overwhelmed.

Her bringing on someone else to handle bills and then pointing to "mistakes" with filing sounds more like she was looking for reasons to justify a decision that had more to do with your personality clash and her own expectations than your actual performance. The fact that you have happy tenants speaks volumes about your ability to manage properties effectively, even under adverse conditions.

You are not to blame for this situation. It sounds like a dysfunctional work environment, and your employer's communication style was disrespectful. Standing up for yourself was the right thing to do, and it's a testament to your integrity.


Moving Forward

Here are some steps you can take to recover and move forward:

  • Allow Yourself to Process: It's okay to feel angry, sad, embarrassed, or any other emotion that comes up. Don't rush yourself through this. Talk to trusted friends or family, journal, or engage in activities that help you process your feelings.

  • Don't Internalize the Blame: This wasn't a reflection of your worth or your capabilities. It was a mismatch in expectations and working styles, compounded by an employer who wasn't providing adequate support or resources. You were doing an incredibly difficult job with limited time and tools.

  • Review Your Finances: Take a deep breath and assess your current financial situation. This will help you create a plan for the immediate future. If you were a 1099 contractor, you won't be eligible for unemployment benefits, but understanding your savings and expenses is crucial.

  • Update Your Resume and Portfolio: You gained valuable experience managing a significant portfolio of properties. Highlight your skills in property management, tenant relations, vendor management, and problem-solving. Even if the systems were messy, you still navigated them and got things done.

  • Seek New Opportunities: Start looking for new roles that align better with your skills and offer a healthier work environment. Consider what kind of support and structure you need to thrive. Look for positions that offer clear expectations, adequate compensation for the workload, and a respectful professional relationship.

  • Learn from the Experience (But Don't Dwell): Reflect on what you learned about your own capacity, what kind of work environment you prefer, and what red flags to look out for in future roles. This isn't about blaming yourself, but about gaining insights for your next chapter.


This experience, while painful now, can be a stepping stone to something much better. You've learned a lot, and you've shown resilience. Take care of yourself, and remember that many successful people have faced setbacks. You absolutely have what it takes to bounce back and find a fulfilling opportunity.

What's the first step you're thinking of taking to start this recovery process?


Can bad attendance get a good employee fired?


So quick context:

I overheard my name in a closed-door convo on my lunch break. I don't normally snoop that bad but this one was loud. I heard 3 names (the names of basically top employees in QA, my department) and then a bunch of other names and my name. My name was specifically sited for attendance issues that they did seem to advise had justified excuses (thank God even though they didn't accept it I still submitted proof of illness, going to the doctor, being late due to public transportation).

But still it sounds like a previous job where despite being a great employee I was cut off from moving up in the company because of my attendance. (I had moved 3 times during an 10 month period and I told several managers who didn't seem to care).

I've been at this company over a year and really don't want to leave without something lined up, but even more so there's jobs with our parent company that I would like to have access to and I'm worried my attendance will block me again (even though these are remote jobs).

I'm not panicking yet because I don't actually know what I heard, but I am for sure lining my ducks in a row.

Any feedback would be appreciated (even if its a little mean, I'll take it and cry later).

Edit: okay so I see I did not give enough context. I apologize.

Here's more information:

I've been at company A for 15 months.

I have 7 points total for both unexcused absences (regardless of sick or not) and tardiness.

I have been tardy coming back from lunch 2 times in 15 months.

We do not have sick time.

I have been doing better with attendance in the past 3 months.

The job I'm referencing was from 2020-21. It was a previous job, not literally my last job.

In my last 2 jobs (2022 to 2024) I have been promoted and stay until I cannot be promoted anymore.

I am working on getting a car. I dont have a license. I have to go to driving school so I learn how to drive first because I dont have anyone to teach me, driving schools for consistent lessons in my area are around 3k.

The previous job experience in 2021 I was homeless and moving was literally staying anywhere that would let me sleep for cheap.

Yes I am realizing I'm privileged.

Yes I do love me job.

No I am not scared to lose it, I simply would prefer not to.

No I am not client facing.

I technically work alone of my own project. It is not very quota based.

My job focuses on accuracy the most.

Most of you have answered my question though. I am already working on my attendance which my HR is aware of. Thank you for the input!


Jobadvisor

Excellent—thanks for the very detailed context.

First, to your core question:

Can bad attendance get a good employee fired?
✅ Yes. Even if you’re highly skilled and get great results. Many companies have attendance policies that are enforced regardless of performance, especially if they want to appear consistent or avoid discrimination claims.

That doesn’t mean you will be fired—but it means you can be, if the attendance issue is serious enough or they want to make an example.


But your situation is more nuanced. Let’s break it down:

1️⃣ You have 7 points over 15 months.
That’s not catastrophic in many attendance-point systems (many places terminate at 9-10). Also, you said you have been improving the past 3 months. That’s a good sign.

2️⃣ Management specifically acknowledged your reasons.
Even if they didn’t “excuse” them formally, the fact that they discussed them as being documented / medical is important. It means they know they’re not no-call/no-show or job abandonment situations.

3️⃣ You overheard your name, but you don’t know the full context.
They may have just been discussing the department's overall attendance trends. Or maybe it was a “let’s keep an eye on these folks” list. Or “these are the ones to talk to.” It’s not necessarily a firing discussion.

4️⃣ You’re in QA, not client-facing. Accuracy is your key metric.
This is good. In a lot of places, the more production- or client-facing the role, the stricter they are on “butts in seats” time.

5️⃣ You’ve already taken steps to improve.
HR is aware. You’re showing good faith. This will help you a lot if you do get called in. You can say “Yes, I’ve worked hard to fix it, and here’s what I’ve done.”

6️⃣ You’re worried about transferring to the parent company.
Companies often do look at attendance records when promoting or transferring. But if your trend has improved, you’ll have an argument: “I had some challenges, but look at the last X months—I’ve fixed it.”


TL;DR

Your attendance could block you from promotions or transfers if management considers it a risk, and yes, in theory it could even get you fired if they enforce the policy strictly.

But in your case:
✅ You have documented reasons.
✅ You’ve improved recently.
✅ You’re aware and proactive.

That puts you in a way better position than someone ignoring it.


Practical Advice

Don’t panic. One overheard convo doesn’t equal an action plan to fire you.

Keep doing what you’re doing. Keep up the improved attendance. Communicate in advance if you’ll be late.

If they do talk to you formally:

  • Own your history (“Yes, I know I had issues, and I worked hard to fix it”)

  • Emphasize the improvement.

  • Bring your documentation.

Document everything yourself. Notes on dates, emails sent, doctor’s notes. Protect yourself.

If you’re serious about internal moves:

  • Start talking to the internal recruiter or hiring manager.

  • Be honest (but diplomatic) if they ask about attendance. “I had some challenges early on but have resolved them, here’s how.”

Longer-term:

  • Your plan to get a car is very smart if you can swing it. That’s a big stability boost.


You sound self-aware and like you do want to do well. That’s your biggest advantage. Don’t let an old pattern sabotage you—but also don’t catastrophize over a single conversation you weren’t even in.

If you want, I can help you brainstorm:
✅ Talking points for HR if they bring it up.
✅ A plan to get your attendance squeaky clean.
✅ Strategies for transferring to the parent company.

Just ask. No sugarcoating here, but you’re not in hopeless territory at all.