Upwork headquartered in Mountain View, California offers their eponymous freelance management system (FMS).
$49.99
per month
Worksuite
Score 5.4 out of 10
Enterprise companies (1,001+ employees)
Worksuite (formerly Shortlist) is designed to help companies find and manage their complete external workforce (freelancers, contractors, and vendors) by providing a single platform to source, onboard, manage, review/rate and pay them.
Upwork provides better conversion rate than the above platforms. I have worked simultanously on all platforms but Upwork was giving the highest return on Investment. Our US team working on Upwork was generating more business than all the other marketing channels. Upwork become …
Upwork is much better. In my opinion, Freelancer.com is too saturated with low quality jobs, and all job offers are immediately saturated with fake proposals or bots. I think there are more scammers on Freelancer.com than there are real freelancers. Also, in my experience, jobs …
Well, UpWork is like gold mine of good clients and customers for a service based outsourcing agency like ours. It has best clients from all over the world.
Upwork is the best platform, in my opinion, at least for my area of freelance type work. They make it easy to find clients, set up contracts, and communicate regardless of time zone. We owe a lot to Upwork for the success of our team of freelancers and to our agency as a whole. …
We have used a few different pieces of software to search for clients and track time. Upwork does the best at combining all of the aspects that we need in order to be organized with client work, in addition to bringing us more clients. The time tracking software does better …
Upwork is better in integrated messaging and keeping the client up-to-date with screenshots. However, the percentage that Upwork keeps from revenue is a big negative against Harvest, since you can just use email to communicate.
Upwork is better if you are looking for some quick hires that can help solve simple problems. If you are looking for someone to join your team, I would recommend something like indeed or ZipRecruiter. I've heard Fiverr is also good, but I haven't used it yet. Overall, Upwork is …
I've never used similar products to Upwork, so I can't compare it to others, but I know they can improve on services from a company (looking for jobs) perspective.
Freelancer.com is another online marketplace to hire freelance individuals for short terms projects. The site is less robust than Upwork in terms of features. The cost is cheaper, but in this case, you get what you pay for. Freelancer does not provide for filtering projects …
In my experience, Upwork is the easiest to use and I have found the most qualified hires there. It could be in your favor to look one as many sites as you can because you never know who won't be on one. Upwork would definitely be my first place to look though.
Freelancer.com is a big mess when it comes to its user interface. I have my different currency pricing on it and the listing is just a mess. I especially don't like that it will ask you to upgrade to increase your number of applications per month. Upwork provides better options …
To be honest, I've lost track of how many freelance hubs I have my profile listed on. At last count, it was likely over 20, which is overwhelming, to be sure, but necessary to increase exposure to find quality clients and projects. Each of these has its pros and cons, and I …
Upwork and Fiverr definitely have the most traffic. Fiverr is good for package services while Upwork is better for customized/long-term services. You really want to use both. Freelancer.com and Guru.com don't have nearly the traffic. They rarely have any jobs in my niche and …
Upwork provides a platform (a software that you can install on your computer) and you are able to manage all of your projects and freelancers on it instead of having to log in and log out to the website every time you want to check on your project status. It is even more …
Upwork is better suited for finding contractors that you can have ongoing relationships. Compared to Fiverr, it's a much easier process to find qualified designers rather than one-time contractors to design simple things for you. The interface is easier to use as well and the …
We've never found another platform that does exactly what Shortlist does in terms of payments, taxes, project management, and on-boarding. We use other sites to source our new vendors (like indeed, craigslist, etc...) but ultimately we direct all those applicants to our …
We've never used another platform that does exactly what Shortlist does in terms of "sort of" project management as well as employee management. There are plenty of better project management software out there but the ability to combine the payment/bidding/employee onboarding …
I would recommend Upwork to a colleague as a solution to workplace issues. Our company has utilized Upwork to vet out potential competitors as well as partners in a lengthy data analysis project, as well as given our engineering team extra hands when implementing new products, projects, and features. This has allowed our company to stay on track with projects without in-house manpower.
I think Shortlist is well suited for a simple company that doesn't need to pull much data from their employees (the BI tool is only available for the high-spend accounts although it seems absolutely ridiculous that any company paying for any platform would be unable to pull data on their own people in the system). Shortlist is great for what it does, it just seems to be limited. I think the groups feature is quite cumbersome and often it seems that the "upgrades" made are not actually an upgrade, but a hindrance. For example, the IM style sending of messages within a project, but not within other areas to send messages. It just leads to typing issues and is in a place that would never be IM style.
In my opinion the worst customer service. It is impossible to contact them via phone, and they are not transparent about their decisions.
I feel they don't have the freelance community's best interest in mind. Their focus is on the companies that pay. Freelancers are disposable.
They charge ridiculous fees to the freelancers that are the ones that need the money the most because they are the ones starting their businesses. It is like if your employer charges you for coming to work.
Shortlist only allows for minor customizations to their platform. It would be great if each company could create their own view/usage set for the system.
The help chat box needs some work for sure. It takes days for someone to respond if they ever respond and often there is nothing they can do to remedy the issue at hand.
Payments should be able to be made every day, not just on Fridays.
I have earned a lot on Upwork and I would always recommend it to my fellow peers and people who have skills and are looking independently and remotely from the comfort of their home. Once you get successful in developing a good profile on Upwork revenue target are more easier to achieve.
Support has been great. Rarely have I ever had an issue that has required support but when I have they have been great. I did have to interact with support to confirm my identity and the process was easy and quick and support was helpful to know what I needed to do to accomplish that task.
30-40% of the time there is no response when you contact the chat/help feature. 30-40% of the time if they do respond, it is to say they can't do anything about the issue. Maybe 20% of the time the chat is actually helpful, but that seems like a high estimate when I think about my experience asking for support.
Upwork is better suited for finding contractors that you can have ongoing relationships. Compared to Fiverr, it's a much easier process to find qualified designers rather than one-time contractors to design simple things for you. The interface is easier to use as well and the billing management makes it so much cleaner and easier to know how much we're spending and how contractors are logging work hours.
We've never found another platform that does exactly what Shortlist does in terms of payments, taxes, project management, and on-boarding. We use other sites to source our new vendors (like Indeed, craigslist, etc...) but ultimately we direct all those applicants to our onboarding in Shortlist. I wish some of the more "minor" platform issues we've had over the last year were fixed sooner (or fixed at all) but it does the job!
We have gotten close to 50% of all of our clients through the platform.
Upwork backs the work done through the platform, so no matter what the client or person you are working with does, you get paid for the work that you do. You aren't left hanging after doing hours of work for a client and then never getting paid for it.
Made it easy to communicate with clients from different parts of the world and set up partnerships and agreements in an easier fashion. I would highly recommend it to anyone with a unique skill set.
Overall shortlist has helped us because we don't have another way to collect and accept bids, create project information, and conduct payments and contracts with vendors.
The negative side is the extremely time consuming nature of navigating through the platform. It takes hours of team members' time to complete simple tasks.