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Valeria's avatar
Valeria K Community Member

From decades of traditional work to freelancing? Share your experience

Over the years, Community members have mentioned giving freelancing and Upwork a try after decades in the traditional workplace or as a way to ease into retirement. Some had already retired and decided to use freelancing for supplemental income.

 

When you have a career that spans multiple decades with vast experience in various roles and industries, how do you choose what to add to your Upwork profile, what to leave out, and what to save for specific proposals? 

 

We’d love to hear more about your experience and any tips you may have for others navigating similar situations.

~ Valeria
Upwork
29 REPLIES 29
Bettye's avatar
Bettye U Community Member

I joined Upwork around 2015/16 after cutting down to part time as I eased into retirement. It's worked out well for me.

 

It's quite simple. My Upwork profile includes my relevant experience in writing, editing, and medical terminology.  It also includes the difference between editing and proofreading and what I don't do (formatting, cover design). I tailor my cover letters to the client's specific needs (I don't answer vague ads that don't specify fiction/nonfiction, subject matter/genre, only if they invite me to apply.) My profile wording is rather long, but it's worked well for me (and many clients have copied my description for use in their ads).

Valeria's avatar
Valeria K Community Member

Thanks for sharing your experience, Bettye! I’m glad to hear this is working out for you well. 

I like that you include a few sentences about what you don't do and what would essentially be outside of the scope of your work. I've seen other Community members do the same to help set boundaries and expectations for clients. 

~ Valeria
Upwork
Kevin's avatar
Kevin M Community Member

You make fill high focused since it's my first time am involving in this job.Bettye thanks for  loading your experience 

Gerald's avatar
Gerald H Community Member

Honestly, few clients spend much time perusing a profile on a site like Upwork. I started here when it was Elance back in 2007. Lots of changes through the years, and yet one thing has remained consistent: you win or lose work based on your cover letter, how you address the specific points of the job description, and your work portfolio.

I advise people to get the first 2-4 sentences of their profile concise and clear. Add all the experience and job titles you want, but it's more noise than anything else here.

That's not to say it wouldn't be vital off platform, as in approaching prospects directly, but with Upwork, you're not impressing anyone with a long-winded profile.

Valeria's avatar
Valeria K Community Member

Gerald, I suppose that was one of the questions I had in mind when I started this topic - is there any harm in a longer profile description? Especially for those professionals who have a lot of experience they could include. Thanks for sharing your advice and approach. 

~ Valeria
Upwork
Bruce's avatar
Bruce D Community Member

I think Gerald is absolutely on point.  The quality of your response to a job description in your proposal is what matters most.   If you can hit on the vital point(s) - either what is there or what is missing in the description - that shows the client immediately that you know what you are doing.   After that,  your job history probably means the most to clients, and lastly your profile.    I do work in a field (MS Office development) where credentials are less important, though.

Mark's avatar
Mark K Community Member

Looks like Upwork is going hard after the retirement gen -- must be some $ to be had.

 

I would be careful what you ask of this lot Valeria - as you might get some stinging answers and opinions that could upset your senstivities and challenge some of the more questionable policies and tactics of UW (e.g. I share my understanding of the 'private feedback' mechanism with lots of colleagues in this demographic....they all give me aghast responses and ask why I would tolerate such nonsense.  I tell them it is one ugly thing in a sea of average where an occassional attractive thing happens). 

 

 

-----

 We generate revenue from both talent and clients, with a majority of our revenue generated from service fees charged to talent for access to our work marketplace, Upwork 10-K Feb 15 ,2022.

 

Christine's avatar
Christine A Community Member

I have to disagree on the importance of a good profile (though not necessarily a "long-winded" one). I get most of my jobs via invitations, including invitations to join talent clouds, and often go for months at a time without having to place any bids. That wouldn't happen if I didn't have a good profile, and I know that clients do read mine because they usually mention specific things as the reason that they've contacted me.

Bettye's avatar
Bettye U Community Member

Just to clarify: My specific profile is longer than I'd ideally prefer it to be not because I'm trying to impress anyone (my 100% Job Success Score, Top Rated status, and less than 24 hours response time are sufficiently impressive on their own), but because I was tired of getting invitations for one-stop publishing, including everything: ghostwriting, editing, proofreading, formatting, and designing a cover, or for writing jobs that pay a penny a word. I also wanted to clarify the difference between proofreading and editing for a public that largely believes they are one and the same. By addressing these, I have cut down considerably on  invitations I'm not interested in. As I said, it's worked well for me. I do, however, agree that the first sentences/paragraph of a profile as well as a cover letter should be clear, concise, and attention-grabbing. 

Nichola's avatar
Nichola L Community Member

Valeria,  this is such a tall order! 

 

"Easing into retirement" has never been less easy!  These days, many of us don'r retire. We die in harness, particularly, as in my case, you have to keep on working any way you can to make ends meet.

But it is true that, IMO, B & M experience makes freelancing today easier, and other experiences in many fields also helps - but this is only from the lofty heights of age wisdom.  I am well aware that this opinion is not at all that of someone who is tech savvy and is perfectly comfortable and competent working from home having never had any kind of 9 - 5 work and could probably command a yearly 6-figure salary age 13!  

 

So in my field (fields) which to start with was in music, and then translation and  publishing (cutting a few decades off  on-the-way here). All this was in tandem with some interim freelance work (before internet), which then somehow developed into my leaving UK and finding myself in arts/crafts and working in an art studio specializing in painted wood  and murals. This was also interspersed with genuine money-earning work with some fairly high-profile people and writers - all to the good, until I finally followed a few get-up-to-date courses and joined - well you know who, as well as hustling for a few outside clients. So a very potted history!

 

(I think I might redo my LinkedIn profile!)

 

ETA: Valeria I didn't really answer your question: I try to cut away fluff and streamline my profile to match my offer of translation and editing, which following on from an earlier career in publishing,  I started to concentrate on as a freelancer  quite a few years back. However, in some proposals I have added experience I have had in areas that are not included in my skill-set.

 

 

Valeria's avatar
Valeria K Community Member

Nichola,

No kidding, it's hard to be optimistic about the whole concept of "retirement" nowadays! 

Thanks for sharing your story and approach! Your profile is mostly focused on proofreading, editing and translation, but it's also interesting to learn about your experience in arts. I see you mention it in the Other Experiences section of your profile. 

~ Valeria
Upwork
Gina's avatar
Gina H Community Member

Considering how utterly inadequate Upwork has been at filtering out spam posts (there are hundreds right now in the graphic design space alone, every other post is a scam), bringing on people ready to retire who may have more trouble with tech and recognizing a scam might not be the smartest move...

Nichola's avatar
Nichola L Community Member


Gina H wrote:

Considering how utterly inadequate Upwork has been at filtering out spam posts (there are hundreds right now in the graphic design space alone, every other post is a scam), bringing on people ready to retire who may have more trouble with tech and recognizing a scam might not be the smartest move...

________________________________

**Edited for Community Guidelines** More a case of bringing on people who do not read Upwork's rules and regs, who do not look at the help pages, and who have no knowledge of anything at all, let alone acqainting themselves with how freelancing works simply by exploring the internet a bit. Age has nothing to do with it! 

 

 


 

Valeria's avatar
Valeria K Community Member

Hi All, 

A few comments have been removed from this thread. I understand that many members are concerned about the topic of Trust & Safety and scam jobs. Our internal teams take it very seriously and have shared information and updates about their work in announcements, blog posts, webinars and on relevant threads. However, that is not the topic of this particular discussion. Please, refrain from posting off-topic comments and making personal attacks. 
Thank you.

~ Valeria
Upwork
Christine's avatar
Christine A Community Member

Indeed, age has nothing to do with it. I was under the impression that younger freelancers have grown up being told not to trust strangers on the Internet, but they seem to be just as likely to fall for scams.

Mary's avatar
Mary W Community Member

I am most likely one of the elder freelancers here.  I turned to freelancing around 2012 after I lost my job.  (I had done contract work from 2001-2005 but Hurricane Katrina ended that).  I find that I can earn a comfortable living working about 10 hours a week, so that's wonderful and I make more per hour than most people in my field.  In 1992-1993 I returned to college and got a paralegal certificate.  Prior to that, I had worked in residential real estate, medical non-profits, physician headhunting, retail, and as a background actor for film and TV.  So I bring a wide range of experiences to the platform. I actually mention all of these somewhere in my profile.  One early client hired me because of real estate experience, another hired me because I graduated from college in the same class as his mother, a couple were fascinated with the acting gigs. So I lay it all out and it works pretty well for me so far.

Kelley's avatar
Kelley K Community Member

After 20 years of working as a designer and creative director, I've been able to use UpWork to transition to a freelance graphic designer and small business owner. In 2020 at the beginning of the pandemic, I started picking up small freelance projects on the side while I was exploring options for the next steps in my career. After a couple of successful projects, it became clear that I could build my own business using UpWork to generate project leads. In 2021, I left my in-house role and am running my own graphic business supporting product-based brands with brand identity and packaging design to grow their sales.

When starting my UpWork profile, it was important to me that I include my corporate roles to show potential clients my real-world expertise. I also referenced these roles in the portfolio examples I added. Looking at it from what potential clients would be focused on, I shared examples and results but left out a lot of detail or skills that didn't apply to their projects.

Vanina's avatar
Vanina C Community Member

Hi Kelley, recently I was called for the Talent Scout Group, I had the interview and I felt very sure of my work, I have more than 20 years of experience in graphic design too, a varied experience with all kinds of clients (I have worked as a freelancer for small entrepreneurs as well as for companies like: Diseny, Coca Cola, Philips, so I know perfectly well what it means to handle different types of clients.
I am a TOP RATED designer and I have an Upwork Skill Certification in Graphic Design (none of that changed that my job offers are more consistent and better, there are days that I get 10 offers and then nothing for months) I was hoping that would change with this interview, but they told me that:
"Unfortunately, your skills don't meet the requirements to join at this time."

What kind of skills do you need to be part of a group like this? Despite giving 150% of myself, I do not want Upwork to become a source of income to support me 100%.

A little disappointed that it gives so much to a platform where I don't get consistency and regularity at work by trying so hard.

 

I was looking the same as you: build my own business using UpWork, but I have to divide between my agency and Upwork because I can grow enought to make Upwork my only income to support myself.

How were you able to get into the Talents Cloud?

Kelley's avatar
Kelley K Community Member

Hi Vanina,

I'm sorry that your experience has been disappointing.

As for the Talent Clouds, I applied to the Talent Scout Group when it launched. I was accepted but have not gotten any jobs from the Talent Scout Talent Cloud. The other Talent Cloud I was added to when I accepted a project with an enterprise client. I would try not to take "Unfortunately, your skills don't meet the requirements to join at this time" personally. I think the Talent Cloud has many freelancers in it, but I don't see many projects posted there.

 

Consider telling your prospective clients in your bio what value you can add to their projects by applying things you learned when working with big-name brand clients. What are the specific lessons learned there that add value to a business of any size? You and I know that as professionals, but clients sometimes need that explained 🙂

 

As a freelancer and business owner, I agree that relying on one client or one source of leads is risky. 

Valeria's avatar
Valeria K Community Member

Hi Mark,
I wouldn't say that "going after that generation" is the the right way to describe the purpose of this thread. It's more of a trend we're observing throughout the research and surveys conducted in the past few years and wanted to hear more stories and experiences that may be helpful to others.

I understand your sentiment about private feedback. However, that's not quite related to the topic of this thread.

~ Valeria
Upwork
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Hi

I fit perfectly into the category of what you are looking at bringing in, recently retired from my "real career", although I did have almost 18 months of freelance work on Upwork in 2016.

Recently retired I decided to keep myself busy and bring in extra funds, although relatively succesful, I made more than my target for the first 4 months, in fact I made 16 months target.

 

However, I find the amount of "real"jobs on Upwork is far less than my first stint in 2016, and don't mention the scam jobs,.

And then there is the posted jobs that don't hire, and with the amount of succesful freelancers on Upwork are you really telling me there isn't an ideal candidate in the proposals? as cynical as I am I often wonder if they are Upwork posted jobs to make the platform look busy.

Now lets talk about connects, and before you defend them, it doesn't stop the 50+ job proposals, I see that regualrly, so it's just another Upwork way of creaming more than the 20% off the freelancer.

For me when a company starts to strip away at the resources like that (Freelancers needing to buy connects to stay available)  it tells me the top management have not managed to make their % of growth and the only option is to attack their employees.. It's the start of the slippery slope.

And as the gig economy is going to be growing over the next few years I am concerned that the platforms are not doing their best to attract real clients. Or they woudln't be chipping away at freelancers for connects.

 

I hope I'm wrong, but the number of people on here voicing the quality and quantity of real jobs sadly may prove to me that I am correct.

So.

Fix the connects, retired folks don't want to pay to start earning, there are other freelancer sites that do that, go on be different.

Weed out scam jobs and please don't tell us to report them, what is the 20% of our fees going to if you can't get that done successfully yourself?

Make clients have payment verified, that will stop the scam jobs or at least some of them,, but I doubt you will do that as you do absolutley nothing to put a block on a client getting onto the platform but make it hard for a freelancer to.

 

I live in hope.

 

Pete

 

 

Brigitte's avatar
Brigitte W Community Member

Pete,

I couldn't have said it better....

I joined Upwork just 32 days ago.

This is what I accomplished in four weeks: 2 offers, 4 invitations, and the Rising Talent badge which appeared suddenly on my profile on day 27.

So, shouldn't I be "happy"?

Well... no 

The time I invested in this circus is outrageous:

- I spent h-o-u-r-s scanning fake job posts; 

- I had to keep my finger on the "recent" jobs to allow me to identify a match and then submit a proposal early enough to land in the first 5 proposals submitted to the client.  

- I replied very promptly to clients' messages to showcase my responsiveness. But clients couldn't care less what the local time is in the freelancer's time zone when they send their laundry list of questions.

- My proposals were tailored and carefully crafted.  I am sure they were decisive in getting 2 offers.

But, let's get real ..I wrote a total of 28 proposals.

Without having any work history at all,  I suppose this is considered an achievement.

 I can already hear freelancers say this is normal - and why am I complaining?

Well, to each their own... 

The caliber of clients on this platform is mediocre  (I am being polite), and they don't deserve such an investment in time and attention.

I am also appalled by Upwork's complacency with loose and inconsistent monitoring of clients. To me, Upwork is a glorified Craigslist marketplace with an intuitive user interface

So, yes - the 2 contracts I obtained are great, and the clients are collaborative

However, life is short and leaving 20% of my efforts to this platform is not justified.

Once my contracts close, I will close my account to leave this Energy Vampire they call Upwork -

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Brigitte, I agree with you completely, I love the energy vampire phrase and it sums it up so eloquently. If I did an internet study of how many times I look at Upwork in a 24-hour period It would be extreme.

 

I am fortunate, I have a very old client that is still using the platform and I am able to pick up a few jobs each month. If that wasn't the case I would be looking at other platforms such as Fiverr but that is bottom-feeding at best and I would rather not work than be offered $5 for an hours work.

 

I have started to market directly to non Upwork clients through email, this has had a limited success, will I bring those clients to Upwork? No chance.

 

The only reason I am still on Upwork was the time I had invested working on bottom-feeder clients to get a good enough JSS to get noticed by the better clients, there are a few out there, saying that my best client is using other platforms as well, as they just can't get the quantity of freelancers to limit themselves to purely Upwork.

 

I think having a "tag" on your opening statement for proposals is beneficial I use 

"Good morning/afternoon/evening from beautiful Bangkok"

It draws some clients in, some would say it would draw the male clients, but I have found the opposite, the majority of my clients tend to be female.

As for all this hoohaa about your profile showing what you can bring to the clients project, yes depending on the type of contract but the majority of the clients are not going to read every profile to get the job done, why has Upwork created so many different badges and JSS? If the profile was so important then we wouldn't need all these badges would we Upwork?

 

Oh and those connects, a sign that Upwork is failing to attract quality clients so attack the freelancers to fill the gap in earnings. 

 

Come on Upwork, make a difference and get your freelancers earning money so that you can too.

 

 

 

Brett's avatar
Brett S Community Member

This is an interesting question. 

 

I have a pretty varied career history (landscape manager, college professor, currently corporate paralegal) and while I have only just starting using UpWork, I have found that my experience is quite valuable; but maybe not as much as the hobby writing I have done. 

 

Since all of my writing samples (academic and popular) have been written for hobby ventures or side gigs outside of the scope of my career at the time, I have the odd (but very useful) combination of experience that is not necessarily related to my careers, but is related to my nature. If that isn't leveraging your personality, I don't know what is. 

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