Freelancers often do not need a full multi-page website. What you actually need is somewhere to show your work, describe what you do, and make it easy for a potential client to get in touch. A one-page site covers all of that without requiring a developer or a monthly subscription.
What to put on your page
Keep it focused. A good freelancer page usually has: your name and a one-line summary of what you do, a short bio or services overview (two or three sentences is enough), a link to your portfolio or best work samples, and a way to get in touch - either a booking link (Calendly) or an email button. That is genuinely all most clients need to decide whether to reach out.
Social icons for LinkedIn or GitHub are worth adding if those profiles show relevant work. Skip platforms that are not relevant to your field.
Building it with OMIU
Add a text block for your name and headline, an image block for your photo, then link blocks for your portfolio, booking link, and email. You do not need to code anything - it is all drag-and-drop.
Example: Link blocks for portfolio, booking, and contact
Once your page is set up, you get a URL like omiu.me/yourname. Add it to your LinkedIn, email signature, resume, or anywhere else you share your details. When your portfolio changes, just log in and update the page.
Cost
OMIU is free during alpha. No credit card, no trial period. You get one profile, core blocks, and 10MB of storage - enough to get a solid freelancer page live without spending anything.
Can I use this instead of a portfolio website?
It depends on your field. For a quick, always-up-to-date page with your key links and contact info, yes. If you need to display a large gallery of work samples, you might still want a dedicated portfolio site and link to it from your OMIU page.