>>44050812Don't join fiverr, from what I've heard, they take a high percentage of your sales. You can do everything through Squareup or paypal (squareup allows you to not have to take clients personal information so that's what I usually prefer)
If you're above average at art, I would recommend starting with selling model art only and specializing in that! You can practice rigging in your own time using the models you make. If you haven't made a Live2D model before, it'll be key to learn how to make one. An amount of the jankiness seen in corporate models comes from corporations hiring illustrators with not enough Live2D model art experience, despite being good artists. It takes a bit to learn.
Specialization is usually recommend among most people in the live2d artist / live2d rigging community! Focusing on both right away can hinder your growth in any single area. There are a few exceptions of people who are absolutely exceptional in both fields (such as cillia), but that comes with a lot of time and practice poured into everything. If you focus on model art now, you can slowly learn rigging as time moves forward, and it'll be easier for you to get good practice in and get more sales and raise your prices as you improve. You'll have a higher client turnaround because you won't be stuck on the same model for a longer period of time, and in turn you'll have more advertising for your work as people use their models.
Practicing rigging could help you learn how to separate things better. I'm lucky that I get to work closely with the person who rigs most of my model art, and because of that, I've been able to learn better separation habits.
Doing operations through twitter has helped me a lot, but I was streaming for about a year beforehand so that helped me gain a clientele. The Live2D discord is where I notice a majority of people find new clients. Once you're good enough, you'll likely get a few apps everytime you open commissions and be able to close commissions within a week!