Apr 3, 2020 02:05:20 AM by Nunaisi L
hi there, I had a clear agreement with a freelancer to do work for two hours. she charged me for the two and a few days later for an extra 20!!! I opened a case of mediation but upwork told me she refuses to refund and they can't do anything just pay me their commission back. did anyone experience something like this? absolutely unacceptable! cant trust upwork to protect it's clients like Fiverr do!
Apr 3, 2020 04:58:57 AM by AleksandarD A
Hi Nunaisi,
I'm sorry to hear about your bad experience with the freelancer. One of our team members will follow up on your dispute ticket to assist you further.
Thank you.
May 25, 2020 11:38:23 AM by Matt G
May 25, 2020 12:11:52 PM by Bojan S
Hi Matt,
The reason why you see this charge is because you have added a salary on the contract when you have sent the offer to the freelancer. One of our team members will reach out to you directly via a support ticket to assist you with this concern.
Thank you for reaching out to us.
May 25, 2020 12:14:38 PM by Matt G
May 26, 2020 06:06:40 AM by Jim R
This an a few other posts on unexpected and unexplained payments are frightening! And right, nobody pays a salary as it is not an option I have ever seen.
My one experience with a dishonest freelancer came down to my agreeing to pay an arbitration fee of $800. as I recall and forfeiting it if I lost; fortunately I won as she had no case except a pack of lies. But Upwork would not review our message thread to see the obvious merrit of my position and was forcing the disagreement to an arbitration more costly that the money at issue! Upwork seems not provide the assurance of satisfactory services and payments that one naturally implies from their agreement. And I suspect many freelanceers also are 'robbed.'
Evidently, a customer must check daily and close a job immediatley after completion.
May 26, 2020 06:42:59 AM by Petra R
Jim R wrote:And right, nobody pays a salary as it is not an option I have ever seen.
So everything you have never seen doesn't exist?
The salary option does exist and is used by plenty of clients.
Jim R wrote:My one experience with a dishonest freelancer came down to my agreeing to pay an arbitration fee of $800.
Nope. The arbitration fee is $ 291 per party (freelancer, cient and Upwork)
May 26, 2020 07:39:38 AM by Jim R
May 26, 2020 08:06:10 AM by Preston H
Arbitration involves 3 parties (client, freelancer, Upwork) paying $291 each, which is a total of $873.
May 26, 2020 09:33:38 AM by Jim R
May 26, 2020 05:44:39 PM by Preston H
re: "Small jobs are essentially without the protections sought by using Upwork!"
Yes, that is correct.
I do not expect any protection from Upwork. So I create my own protection.
How?
Mainly by starting only with small projects, until the other party demonstrations they can be trusted.
Apr 3, 2020 12:22:08 PM by Andrea G
Hi Nunaisi,
I'm curious, did you agree initially on 2 hours but then asked her to do more work?
If not, and she entered the 20 hours manually then that payment is not protected for the freelancer so I don't know why Upwork can't refund you. Also, you have a few days to review the hours before they charge you, I guess you did not notice and did not speak up then? Does Upwork notify clients when they have hours that need to be reviewed?
The only way the payment is protected for a freelancer on an hourly contract is if they use the Time Tracker which takes screenshots and records activity, the freelancer would have had to demonstrate they were working on your project all of that time!
Could you elaborate on exactly what happened?
Apr 3, 2020 12:52:16 PM by Nunaisi L
Apr 3, 2020 01:22:45 PM by Andrea G
Nunaisi, I am not familiar with the field but I think from the way you described the work this could have been a fixed contract. If you are going to agree on a number of hours it may be best to add up the hourly rate and create a fixed contract for that price, I believe hourly contracts are best fitted for ongoing work.
You can see for yourself if the hours were included manually or not in the Work Diary, the screenshots are not something that is sent to you, they are registered in the Work Diary by an application from Upwork we install in our desktops, I would think it is very unlikely for them to be fabricated. For Upwork not to return your money the freelancer must have proven they were working on your project, is that what they told you?
From the amount of fees you mentioned I can tell this was not a very high paying job, again I am not familiar with the field, but when a project's budget is too low, the most professional and qualified freelancers tend to avoid sending proposals. It makes me sad that you bring up Fiverr, I used to do some work there and as an Architect with years of experience and pursuing a Masters Degree, they just undervalue work too much, it may take me one click to fix a problem in your model but guess what it took me years to be proficient enough in the program to know which button to click.
I think clients and freelancers both need to be protected and Upwork is great at that if you use the tools they give you correctly, I just remembered, there is a feature where you can limit the amount of time the freelancer can work on the contract and any time over that is not protected for their payment, so I guess my advice would be to familiarize yourself with all of the tools Upwork gives you to be safe and you shouldn't have any more problems.
Apr 3, 2020 02:23:10 PM by Preston H
If I want a freelancer to work for only two hours, then I set the maximum allowable time per week to two hours.
If I only want the freelancer to work for two hours total, and not work for two more hours the next week, then after the freelancer works for two hours, I close the contract.