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Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

$2M Earned on Upwork. I would love to HELP!

Hey Everyone,
 
I posted this in the newbie group. I can answer newbie questions there,
 
I can help answer more advanced questions here, I would love to help my fellow freelancers : )

 

I have been on upwork for 12 years now (previously elance),

 

I have been on the forums for a couple years but never really participated much,

 

I figured, what better way than to help others, ask away, some stats below (you can also click to see my profile)

 

👉 Earned $2 Million+ on Upwork.
👉 Completed 400+ jobs on freelance platforms.
👉 Attained 200+ 5-star reviews.
👉 Worked 40,000+ hours on freelance platforms
👉 Earned a 100% Feedback Rating
👉 Worked with 1,000+ Clients

 

Thank You - Sam

2,293 REPLIES 2,293
Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Perfectly said Martina.

Temi's avatar
Temi A Community Member

This is very thoughtful of you.

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

My Pleasure.

Maureen's avatar
Maureen S Community Member

Hey Andrew! 

Welcome to Upwork. I am new as well. That was an extremely thoughtful and kind gesture. I pray you have great success on the site. 

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

thank you for helping the community

Muhammad Arslan's avatar
Muhammad Arslan J Community Member

Yoo.. It's pretty appreciated bro! Sure, I would like to ask you to give me some tips to convince clients with different proposals and Wordsworth.

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Honestly, every scenarios is different right,

Some clients are looking for price, some clients are looking for qualiy or speed, some clients want all three.

I would say, focus on a mix or quality and price,

I would ask the client this question and and they can only pick 2: 


Fast, Cheap and Good.

Ask them this, they can only pick two, you will get your answer fairly quickly,

Fast and Good = It wont be cheap : )

Anyway, you want to make sure that you show the client a good history, speak openly and honestly,

You was to assure clients you will do a great job, offer references and so on.

I hope this helps

Lata's avatar
Lata S Community Member

The 3 legged Stool to sit on 🙂

In technology and other work you can only choose 2

Muhammad's avatar
Muhammad M Community Member

Why is my Upwork profile job success score going down day by day, even though I have all my previous clients with good ratings? Any Suggestions Plse? https://www.upwork.com/freelancers/~01e19b426f4d8d303a

 

mahdesignstudio_0-1667296969193.jpeg

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Muhammad,

 

This can be for many reasons: 

 

1. The clients you completed could have left poor private feedback

2. You had good private reviews fall off after some time and this caused the score to change.

Martina's avatar
Martina P Community Member

What is the strategy behind having a profile rate of $200, but working for $50 to $60? I usually recommend people only work for their current profile rate (when accepting new contracts), but not much higher nor much lower, to me it seems to be inconsistent messaging. Hence I'd be interested in your reasons. 

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Great Question. I answered this below but I will go at it again. No real starategy, these are suaully legacy clients from many years back. I try to hold the same rate for these kinds of clients. Meaning. I have some clients on uwprok which I have been working with for a few years, I try to hold the original rate. Usually, these are consultation calls, and sometimes they turn in to longer term contracts but that is not as often as I would like. Its all good. I try to make every client 1000% happy. That is always my goal here honestly. Keep clients happy, they will come back, they will recommend you etc. I had a client who i held pricing the same for the last 5 years, they have personally recommended me to 2 other clients who were also on upwork.

CJ's avatar
CJ A Community Member

I noticed on your profile, you list your rate at $200.00/hour, but most of your recent jobs are around $60/hour.  Is there a strategy behind this?  

 

I don't follow whatever bogus un-official 'rules' I have seen on these forums about never changing your rate more than once a year. I tie my mimimum rate almost in 'lock-step' to inflation: If the cost of living goes UP, then the cost of my services goes UP.  8% inflation? = 8% rate hike. Also, I use my profile rate as a 'mimimum' rate: Meaning a more complex job may require a higher rate for me to agree to do the job. Obviously, that doesn't affect existing (long-term) clients, but all future ones.  I'm just curious as to what mechanism other experienced freelancers use to determine how to 'price' their services and adjust as the economic winds change.

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Hey CJ,

 

Great question. Basically, those are clients I have had on the platform for many years, they are on my old rate. I have a LOT of clients who need help every couple week, or few weeks who come back for a consultation. Those are the smaller jobs. Feel free to look through the older jobs and current ones, you will see that most of them are long term clients. The key to success on upwork and other freelance platform is long term clients.

CJ's avatar
CJ A Community Member

Ok.  Well that definitely makes sense.  I don't 'jack up' my rates on long term clients, and especially wouldn't do so without first discussing with them and coming to an agreement and a new/updated contract can be issued then.   I did have one of my older, former clients 'pop up' a couple months ago hoping to have me help with a job at the rate he was charged well over 2 years ago, and I had to politely refuse.  It just wouldn't have made good financial sense because if NEW clients see somebody getting a recent 'cheap' rate, then they all start asking for the 'cheap' rate and next thing you know clients keep 'bidding' lower and lower. "Well, you did a similar job for that guy for half the money."  or "You did a similar job 2.5 years ago for half the money".  All I can do is shrug and tell them "Yesterday's price, is not today's price."   If you don't believe me, drive by a gas station.   LOL  Inflation.  There's also the matter of having only a limited number of hours in a day, so it just didn't make sense burning up hours on a project that would be paying less than half what other clients are currently paying.

Christine's avatar
Christine A Community Member

Okay, but it doesn't look like you ever charge anyone more than $60/hour, so why does your profile say that your rate is more than three times that? I have clients that I've been working with for many years as well, but I still raise my rates with them every year or so; none of them are paying me less than 1/3 of my current profile rate.

Steven's avatar
Steven T Community Member

You are working in a field that allows for a much higher rate than most freelancers get. The best tip you could give anybody is to do your job. An average freelancer could do the same hours as you, get the same ratings and not earn $2m, its basic economics. In that same time, Jeff Bezos earned a lot more than you. Maybe you should start an online shop.

Md Masum Miah's avatar
Md Masum Miah J Community Member

Wow, that's amazing

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Thank You so much!

Eleonora's avatar
Eleonora A Community Member

Hi Samer, your results are excellent! 

One question: how do you find high-paying consistent clients? You just respond to invitations, or do you look and apply for contracts too? And how do you introduce yourself to get the job?
More: do you got a regular profile, or did you subscribe to "Upwork Freelancer Plus"?
Last (but not least!): any advice regarding my profile is welcome 😬
Keep on rocking! 

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Hey Eleonora,

 

Answers to your questions:

 

1. I mostly apply to projects, I, like others here, have not been getting a large number of invitations, a few a week.

2. Sure, I introduce myself depending on the job, if the job is about "Pay Per Click", I would say something like

"Hey Joe,

 

My name is Sam and I have been on Upwork for 12 years (formally elance), I have worked on XXX profjects and have a 5 star rating. I have 15 years experience with PPC and would love to have the oppertunity to connect and speak about your project... etc".

 

Now, if you are new, I would say something like this

"Hey Joe,

 

I hope all is well. Eleonora here, I am new to Upwork but please don't let that deter you, I have 10 years experience with Graphic Design and decided to bring my Design Services to the masses, with my services, I promise to give the following: 

1. The best possible output, accrding to your requirement

2. Always communicate and get on calls / zoom as needed

 

etc... Give the potential client confidence that you will do a good job and they should trust in you and your abilities,

 

I have an uograde dprofile, both on the personl and agency side.

 

I will have a look at your profile and give you some pointers.

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Eleonora,

 

I had a look at your profile and in general, it looks really good. I would expand on your intro, Upwork allows you to add more text there so take advantage of it. I like your portfilio and other the certifications. Do you have any additional certifications that you can take? At this point, for you, its mainly about submitting proposals. For long term clients, I would say focus on trying to get work with Agencies (marketing or design firms), they usually have a lot of clients with long term work always available. I have found that working with agencies has been part of why I have been able to get long term clients / contracts.

Eleonora's avatar
Eleonora A Community Member

Thank you so much for your time (I say: really, thanks.)
Do you have any advice on how to get in touch (and get work) with agencies? At the moment my jobs on upwork are a little bit "slowed down", don't know why...
I owe you a beer (or a coffee)! 😄

Samer's avatar
Samer B Community Member

Eleonora,

 

No worries, you owe me nothing. I am glad that I can help, Usually, when searching upwork, you will see that some clients will say that they run an agency, those are the ones you really want to talk to. Usually agencies have a lot of work and they want to bring someone in for the long term like a content writer, a developer, a designer, etc. Keep looking, they are there.

Eleonora's avatar
Eleonora A Community Member

thank you, I definitely will!