May 27, 2019 09:11:35 AM Edited May 28, 2019 01:21:44 PM by Mary W
My Upwork acct has just rolled over into the new "pay to play" connects system. While I am unconvinced of Upwork's statements on why these will be "improvements", I am trying to give things a chance. While I complete some jobs, I am looking through my job stream and seeing what kind of rates (of the connects) are being applied to what kinds of jobs.
As suspected, Im definitely seeing some ads that still are getting bombarded with 20-50 applications within a short time. These same jobs, before the new connect system, definitely gave advantage to the freelancers in countries with a lower cost of living. Definitely goes against the result that Upwork staff purported during its town hall and explanation of the new system. While I am taking a more conservative stance on what jobs I apply for, I have felt more liberal in marking more ads as "Budget Too Low" when compared to how often I would do that in the old connects system. Unfortunatley, between the available flags the "Budget Too Low" designation is the closest choice to apply to this situation. Really, I figure that for a while, there are going to be mistakes in the connect rate that Upwork staff assesses for jobs. It would be nice to have a more direct flag to just say "hey, this advert might be requiring an incorrect number of connects for the circumstances and description of this ad" . Again, trying to be patient here and see how things look a month from now.
Update: Here is a rundown of the types of sectors my job search and skill set fall into
One respondant to this thread was correct in that "what I am seeing" may highly depend on what Upwork job categories Im working in.
Simply put, I dont think that the analysis of "how many connects to charge" is effective. Still seeing the same amount of low ball jobs, and the same amount of jobs submitted by those who havent verified payment. I already was disinclined to apply for those before this new system, but Ill tell you... how can they charge 4 connects for such low pay jobs, or for the jobs that have no guarantee of follow through (because payment is not verified). If there was a "Charging Too Many Connects" flag for ads, I would use that instead.
May 27, 2019 09:24:05 AM by Tiffany S
Don't forget that only a fraction of freelancers have been moved to the paid connects system thus far. Many of us are still not paying for connects. Even those who are may have 60 left over from the most recent renewal. So, any analysis of the success or failure of the system is quite premature.
May 27, 2019 09:37:58 AM Edited May 27, 2019 09:39:25 AM by Mary W
Yeah. You are right which is why I am giving it more time. I just wish there was a way to provide feedback on what connect rates are being set on ads. Flagging one of these ads (like, the example of the add charging 4 connects for a $100 job and/or from an unverified payment method user) has me using the "budget too low" flag, as that is the closest choice that applies to this situation. Maybe that would help get some of the bumps out of the system.
May 27, 2019 09:41:45 AM by Petra R
I love the big bucks / client with no verified payment method job posts. They tend not to get that many proposals, so chances of winning them are higher and I love working with new clients anyway.
Those will get even less proposals now as people don't want to risk 6 connects...
May 27, 2019 11:26:41 AM by Tiffany S
Petra R wrote:I love the big bucks / client with no verified payment method job posts. They tend not to get that many proposals, so chances of winning them are higher and I love working with new clients anyway.
Those will get even less proposals now as people don't want to risk 6 connects...
Me, too, and for other reasons, as well. An unverified client is usually one who is new to Upwork, which increases the chance that he/she is looking for a specific skill versus trying to staff a business with freelancers. I try to avoid clients with a long Upwork history unless they are well-establishing marketing agencies, because a company using a high volume of Upwork freelancers isn't likely to be a high-end, high-paying client.
Jun 10, 2019 08:44:49 AM Edited Jun 10, 2019 09:34:09 AM by Bojan S
"analysis of the success or failure of the system is quite premature."
LOL. As my daddy always said, "you don't need to be a weather man to see which way the wind blows." I'm a relative new-comer to the platform and I can tell you, from where I sit, it looks like a scam to me. In other words, it appears Upwork is pivoting from a platform that makes money when its freelancers make money to a platform that makes money DESPITE its freelancers losing it. Lost in this discussion of charging for connects are two essential ingredients that make this look like a scam. First, the number of connects required to apply for positions has increased dramatically. In my case, as an acocuntant, I've seen the number required go from 2 to 6 on almost every job. So not only must I pay for connects I must pay for 3X as many as was required before.
But that's not where the scam lies, in my opinion. I just logged in to my email here and, as is always the case, I get some words of wisdom from the platform (i.e. "Did you know?....") as I wait for my email to load. Today it was this: "Did you know it takes an employer 3 days, on average, to hire on our platform?" REALLY? Do tell. Because, being new to this platform, I got 60 connects and then got an additional 30 for being rising talent. 90 total. And each job used to cost 2 connects to apply. So almost immediately I applied for 45 jobs. That was two months ago. And most of those jobs are still open. And, in many cases, I can go in and look at those jobs now and see that the job has been awarded and that someone is working, and billing for, it. See attached screen shot. Here's an example of a job still showing as open, ***and on which dumb ass freelancers are still wasting connects they now must buy to apply for,*** that is, in fact, long ago awarded and gone. Yes, it may in fact take 3 days on average for a job to be awarded. Thanks for the stat, Upwork. But here's the problem: Upwork isn't clearing those awarded jobs out of the job feed. They are left there for people to waste connects they paid for on it.
What does this tell me? It tells me Upwork has devolved in to a scam. The mission has become to make as much money as possible off of people ***applying*** for work rather than making money from people ***doing*** work. The difference matters and, in this case, it will ultimately prove to be this platform's undoing.
Again, one need not be a weatherman.....
**Edited for community guidelines**
Jun 10, 2019 09:39:55 AM by Will L
Marco,
If Upwork is allowing freelancers to continue to submit proposals (and spend their connects) on jobs that have already been awarded to other freelancers, that is a serious problem.
But I have never noticed that to be the case.
Jun 10, 2019 09:55:03 AM by Rene K
Will L wrote:Marco,
If Upwork is allowing freelancers to continue to submit proposals (and spend their connects) on jobs that have already been awarded to other freelancers, that is a serious problem.
But I have never noticed that to be the case.
It does. Thanks God it doesn't close the job automatically when one person has been hired. The client is the one who decides if they want to close the job once a hire is been made, or if they still need more applicants and more hires, not Upwork.
Upwokk asks clients after each hire if they want to close the job or if they want to keep it open, and clients decide.
Jun 10, 2019 10:28:20 AM by Will L
The client should state how many freelancers they need when filling in the new job form on Upwork
If that number is "1", Upwork should automatically stop showing it to freelancers and stop allowing proposals on it once a freelancer is hired.
If the current situation is that clients have to notify Upwork when they don't want any more proposals on a job posting, that is silly. When we so often see complaints here that clients are not closing completed jobs, what in the world makes Upwork think clients will be any better at actually telling Upwork they don't want to receive any more proposals on jobs they have found a freelancer for?
Now I understand why jobs I've applied to are apparently still "open" for a while after I've applied. Or why I see jobs that appear to be attractive and stay "open" for weeks after first being posted.
But this situation allows for alot of connects being wasted by freelancers fruitlessly applying to jobs that the clients have no intention of doing further hiring on. (I don't apply to jobs that were posted more than two or three days before I submit a proposal, so this Upwork "feature" probably doesn't have much effect on me.)
Not good, Upwork. Not good at all.
Jun 11, 2019 03:37:52 AM Edited Jun 11, 2019 03:39:17 AM by Goran V
This is how Upwork doing "fair" business, building a strong relations with their **Edited for Community Guidelines**partners(freelancers).
Jun 10, 2019 03:56:28 PM by Anna T
Will L wrote:Marco,
If Upwork is allowing freelancers to continue to submit proposals (and spend their connects) on jobs that have already been awarded to other freelancers, that is a serious problem.
Yes, it happens and it happens all the time. It's a flagrant disregard to the freelancers money and time. Compound that by 3x of tangible money and I see a serious problem as well. But remember, this is "for our own good".
Jun 18, 2019 08:58:09 PM by Emily G
Are they leaving jobs up that have been filled? Quite often you can see "1 hired" in the stats at the bottom of a job once you've looked at the job activity. If the client is looking for more than one freelancer then fair enough, but if not then I have to say it does at least look dodgy.
Of course, a fair few times I've been hired for projects that another freelancer has failed to do a satisfactory job on, in which case of course someone else has been hired before me (sometimes even more than one someones).
It would be great to get some clarification on this from Upwork. I think I might ask it as a question.
Jun 10, 2019 09:50:28 AM Edited Jun 10, 2019 09:51:35 AM by Rene K
Marco V wrote:
> I've seen the number required go from 2 to 6 on almost every job
6 connects means $0.90. Who can afford that much money nowadays?
> Upwork has devolved in to a scam.
Who in their sane mind yould remain on a platform that is a scam? Don't hesitate to ask the help of the moderators to close your account that you opened by mistake on this scam site.
Jun 11, 2019 03:33:44 AM by Anatolii Z
I'm agree with you, except the fact that Upwork too greedy to get money only from connects. They need money from every were and every one. Clients are paying when creating a job, freelancers are paying 20%(man it was fair when we payed 10%) when doing job and now paying for this scamconnects(hello bitconnect). I'm sure next year we will see another scam grabbing more money from freelancer.
It is too greedy Upwork you know?
Jul 4, 2019 11:46:43 PM by Tess D
'm imagining things and maybe I'm not too smart, but it seems to me I'm being charged twice to get work: I pay to apply and I pay a % of what I earn. (Then I pay income tax, of course.)
In reality, it simply isn't worth working through Upwork in my view. I'm going to try another platform unless someone can correct me and show me that I'm onto a good thing by paying twice to get a job.
Jul 9, 2019 03:55:39 AM by Rene K
Tess D wrote:'m imagining things and maybe I'm not too smart, but it seems to me I'm being charged twice to get work: I pay to apply and I pay a % of what I earn. (Then I pay income tax, of course.)
In reality, it simply isn't worth working through Upwork in my view. I'm going to try another platform unless someone can correct me and show me that I'm onto a good thing by paying twice to get a job.
Tess, there are expenses and revenue. Whatever you pay to get a gig is an expense, whatever you get from the gig is revenue. This gives you a ratio in %.
Compare different sources of gigs and settle for the one that gives you the best ratio and the best flow of income. There are so many options out there: many different B2B platforms, Craiglist, cold calls, ads, etc.
Upwork is one B2B platform amongst many others. It's not working for you? Got a better ratio elsewhere? No problem, ditch Upwork, you don't own it anything. No hard feelings.
May 27, 2019 09:35:15 AM by Jennifer M
I can only speak for my section, but I've noticed some of my prime target clients aren't getting many proposals, so I'm kinda liking the change. I've only been looking for the past couple of weeks though and holiday weeks are always terribly slow so I'm waiting until June to start really looking into it.
I think I got rolled over just a couple days ago but with the holiday people are taking 5 day weekends over here.
May 27, 2019 11:37:12 PM Edited May 27, 2019 11:50:13 PM by Taha A
I was just reviewing my feed today and noticed that most of the jobs require 6 Connects! Yet, there are still so many applicants to these jobs. Upwork said that they did this change so that clients receive less proposals (in other words, less competition for freelancers) but I don't see this happening currently. Also, Upwork said they estimate that freelancers will spend around $5 monthly on Connects. How can this happen if most of the jobs costs 6 Connects?! If I want to bid for 10 jobs per month, then I need to spend $9 to get 60 Connects which is not a low amount.
May 28, 2019 12:09:17 AM by Petra R
Taha A wrote:I was just reviewing my feed today and noticed that most of the jobs require 6 Connects! Yet, there are still so many applicants to these jobs.
Most people have not been moved over or haven't had to spend any connects yet because they had so many and all the top rated people got another 60.
Also, if you are in one of the desperately over-subscribed categories, it will still be very competitive going forward. That is just how it is.
May 28, 2019 12:39:41 AM by Taha A
Then the freelancers (or should I say victims) who have been enrolled to the new Connects system are in disadvantage compared to the rest of freelancers as they have to spend more Connects to apply for the exact same jobs. I believe Upwork should compensate them by adding free Connects to their accounts.
May 28, 2019 12:44:35 AM by Petra R
Taha A wrote:Then the freelancers (or should I say victims)
Oh please....
May 28, 2019 12:59:26 AM by Taha A
Petra,
You are in the website for many years and most likely, you have recurring clients and receiving invitation from clients. So you are not much impacted by the change compared to new freelancers. Put yourself in their place and you will understand.
May 28, 2019 01:31:12 PM by Mary W
I'll be blunt. A reply like this is exactly what I anticipated would probably come up, simply because of the inequality at how these new conditions are playing out. The reason this scenario cannot be so simple as saying "suck it up" or "life is unfair") is because things like a given user's ratings, skillset, categories*, tenure and Upwork job experience....those all are part of what is going to make the experiencee we are having differ from person to person. The main reason I debated not creating this thread of all because of replies from people that may have the "It worked for me..." mindset.
* at least, that was suggested by another user and I totally agree with that as a possibility
May 28, 2019 01:57:15 PM by Tiffany S
Mary W wrote:I'll be blunt. A reply like this is exactly what I anticipated would probably come up, simply because of the inequality at how these new conditions are playing out. The reason this scenario cannot be so simple as saying "suck it up" or "life is unfair") is because things like a given user's ratings, skillset, categories*, tenure and Upwork job experience....those all are part of what is going to make the experiencee we are having differ from person to person. The main reason I debated not creating this thread of all because of replies from people that may have the "It worked for me..." mindset.
* at least, that was suggested by another user and I totally agree with that as a possibility
I think that what you're interpreting as people not realizing (or not caring) that the impact will be more significant on others is really just seasoned freelancers recognizing that this impact is not accidental. The point isn't that we think it will/could work just as well for everyone, nor is it that we're heartless. We just understand that Upwork is a business, making business decisions.
A freelancer to whom $9/month is a lot of money is not a freelancer who will be a profitable customer for Upwork. The new system works for the freelancers Upwork makes money from--high-billing freelancers with long-term clients who pay Upwork hundreds of dollars per month in fees and require virtually no assistance from Upwork staff.
That's very bad news for low-billing freelancers who do mostly small one-offs, and we (or I, at least) really feel for those affected. But, Upwork's job isn't to be fair to freelancers or to help low-billing freelancers eke out a living--it's to make money.
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