How your mail carrier ✉️ can help your UPWORK profile

Caleb Ulku 8:03
Transcript
0:00
0:00 I'm Caleb Alcu and in this video I'm going to talk about how to write the
0:03 overview section of your Upwork profile. There are three key things that your
0:06 profile helps with landing jobs and Upwork and none of them are clients
0:09 seeing it. The third one is overlooked so often that I want you to be aware of it
0:13 so you can have an advantage over your competition. The main goal of the
0:16 overview section is to get your profile approved so you can start sending
0:20 proposals. Once it's approved and you're sending proposals then use your free time
0:24 to come back and improve the overview. Do not spend weeks and weeks and weeks
0:29 trying to make a perfect profile on Upwork. It's honestly a complete waste of
0:33 time. I've worked with so many people one-on-one who are frustrated with
0:36 Upwork because they didn't spend any time actually sending proposals. For your
0:40 profile overall, get it to a place where it's just short of being embarrassing.
0:44 Then get it approved so you can start sending proposals. Your goal needs to be
0:48 to start sending proposals as soon as possible. Okay so let's dive into the
0:53 overview section. The first few sentences of your overview are going to be
0:57 displayed to clients when they're looking at a list of freelancers. Now it's important to keep in
1:01 mind that they will not see anything on your profile except your title when they're looking
1:06 at the freelancers who sent proposals to their posted job. Okay, clients will only see the start
1:13 of your overview if they're browsing lists of freelancers directly. This is not something that
1:17 many clients do. It's clients who haven't posted a job yet and they're just browsing freelancers.
1:22 So this overview is important for three things.
1:25 Number one, as I said, to get your profile approved.
1:28 Number two, when a client does look at your profile,
1:31 we want them to take the next step.
1:33 Clients who see your profile are,
1:35 as we would say, low in the funnel,
1:37 meaning they've already invested a lot of time in you
1:40 and are likely going to move forward.
1:42 You just need to give them a little push
1:44 toward the next step.
1:45 Most of your future clients are going to offer you the job
1:48 before they read your overview.
1:50 Now, the third and final reason,
1:52 And a huge reason that most people forget about is for Upwork searches So we want to use the profile to demonstrate to Upwork algorithm what you want to rank for and what jobs you want them to match you for Your profile especially your overview is key in feeding Upwork the words it needs to
2:10 match you and rank you.
2:12 Now use keywords.
2:13 Leverage the Upwork autocomplete.
2:14 If you're unaware of what that is, the autocomplete is when you are browsing Upwork and you're
2:19 searching for freelancers or jobs and start typing keywords in.
2:22 Upwork is going to suggest auto completions, which is a clear sign from Upwork that those
2:27 suggested completions, it is highly relevant to the target keywords.
2:31 So do both search for jobs, search for freelancers to get the auto complete suggestions.
2:35 Additionally, start posting a job on Upwork in your field and Upwork will give you a massive
2:41 amount of data, a massive amount of keywords in their suggested skills section, a goldmine.
2:46 Okay, use that in your overview section.
2:49 So Upwork is more likely to match you with clients.
2:51 Do not fall into the same trap as so many other mediocre on this platform and describe
2:57 yourself in subjective terms, in vague platitudes, and then list out all of your qualifications.
3:02 I'm a well-qualified worker with six years of experience and always deliver a visual
3:06 impactful project for my clients.
3:08 Awful.
3:08 That doesn't mean anything.
3:10 They're not super interesting.
3:11 Okay?
3:12 Remember, your best future clients, they don't actually have any time.
3:15 They have a problem that they need solved and no time in which to solve it.
3:19 What you need to do with your overview is focus on the results that you're going to achieve for your clients.
3:25 Don't talk about yourself, okay?
3:26 Frankly, those clients don't care about you.
3:29 They really only care about what results you're going to deliver to them,
3:33 what problems you're going to solve for them.
3:36 So with that in mind, after the first two or three sentences,
3:40 it's time to throw in a few testimonials or reviews.
3:42 You're probably thinking, well, come on, there's a review section at the bottom of your profile.
3:47 And absolutely there is.
3:48 and some clients will see that.
3:50 But to see that, they're going to need to scroll
3:53 all the way down to the bottom.
3:54 And if you're new on Upwork,
3:55 you don even have any reviews down there So the best testimonials basically say that you trustworthy honest and can deliver what you say you deliver You can get this type of testimonial from your existing clients And if you don have any existing clients at all
4:10 if you're relatively new, you can get this testimonial from friends, family members,
4:14 mail carriers, basically anyone saying that you're a trustworthy, honest person,
4:18 and they would work with you. Hopefully there are multiple people in your life who would be happy to
4:23 say that you're an honest and trustworthy person. As I said, you don't need clients to get these
4:28 testimonials. Just look for somebody in your life who will verify that you're honest and trustworthy.
4:33 So put those testimonials in and later, once you start to land clients and get your first few
4:39 reviews, come back and add them. So after the testimonials, do not give a bunch of bulleted
4:44 lists. No client is going to read a bunch of bullet lists of all the things you can do and
4:49 then reach out to you. Instead, describe why you're trying to land clients in this area.
4:54 Why did you choose your specific niche? Why should the future clients hire you? What has your prior
4:59 experience taught you about your niche and what services and categories you offer? So I'm an SEO.
5:06 My profile talks a lot about how I do keyword research, backlink building, local SEO, Google
5:12 business profile optimization, SEO optimized content, writing audits, writing reports,
5:17 and more things like that.
5:19 So when you mention all these different services,
5:21 that helps Upwork's algorithm
5:22 know what client jobs to match you with.
5:25 Generally, as I said,
5:27 don't just do a bulleted list though.
5:28 You're going to want to talk
5:29 through these different services,
5:31 all these different aspects of SEO of your niche
5:34 and what you can do.
5:35 Go deep, talk about what you've done for prior clients
5:38 and how it's helped them.
5:40 But also avoid big blocks of text.
5:42 Three or four sentences is your max paragraph size.
5:45 Big blocks of text are exceptionally intimidating and usually results in the client not reading
5:50 anything.
5:51 Do not write your overview directly into the box that Upwork provides.
5:55 Too many of the people that I work with had issues with an accidental reload or something similar that scrubbed every word they wrote Instead write it in a word processor or even a draft in Gmail Grammarly is a good free
6:07 resource that you can use to ensure you're using clear succinct language without grammatical errors.
6:13 If a client is taking the time to look at your profile a grammatical error is the surest way to
6:18 turn them off. Make sure you don't have any. Some silly thing like a grammatical error that's so
6:24 easy and free to prevent should not stop a future client from taking action toward hiring you.
6:30 Finally, end your overview with a call to action. What do you want your future client to do
6:35 after reading your profile? You probably want them to open up a conversation with you or continue
6:41 your existing one. So close with a reminder that you know you're the best candidate for their job.
6:47 You're going to deliver the results that they want. You're going to solve the problems they have.
6:50 The next step for them to take is to click that green button.
6:54 So use these concepts as a guide, but do not spend weeks on your profile, okay?
6:59 Your goal is to get something that isn't embarrassing.
7:01 That's the metric we're going for.
7:03 Something that isn't embarrassing so you can get your profile approved and start sending proposals.
7:10 You get clients on Upwork from sending proposals.
7:13 So if you submit your profile for approval and it's denied, no big deal.
7:17 Make some edits and try again.
7:18 Add the welcome video, try again.
7:21 Change your experience level, try again, okay?
7:24 It's not a big deal.
7:26 There's no penalty on submitting for approval
7:28 many, many, many times.
7:31 So write something that's decent,
7:33 that's just above embarrassing,
7:34 and then move on to the next step of sending proposals, okay?
7:38 So hopefully you found this video valuable.
7:40 Post your questions below about your Upwork profile
7:42 and I'll answer them.
7:44 And if you're feeling particularly dangerous,
7:45 go ahead and drop your Upwork profile link
7:47 and I'll take a quick look at it.
7:49 Don't forget to subscribe, comment,
7:50 and turn on those notifications.
7:52 I publish two to three videos each week
7:54 and will continue to break down the exact process I've used
7:58 to build multiple six and seven figure agencies on Upwork.

Caleb Ulku explains how to write an effective Upwork profile overview, emphasizing that its three main purposes are: getting the profile approved, nudging clients who are already viewing your profile to take action, and feeding Upwork's algorithm with keywords so it matches you with relevant jobs. He argues that most freelancers waste too much time perfecting their profile instead of sending proposals, and that the goal should be a 'not embarrassing' profile submitted quickly. Key tactics include using Upwork autocomplete and job-posting suggestions to find keywords, leading with client results rather than personal qualifications, embedding testimonials (even from non-clients like friends or a mail carrier) directly in the overview, and closing with a clear call to action.

Upwork Profile Overview Optimization Upwork Algorithm and SEO Strategy Speed to Market Over Perfection Building Trust with Potential Clients Client-Centric Copywriting Caleb Alcu
  • Use Upwork's autocomplete search and the 'suggested skills' section when posting a fake job listing to discover high-value keywords to embed naturally throughout your overview.
  • Include testimonials directly inside the overview text—not just in the reviews section—and if you have no clients yet, testimonials from friends, family, or anyone vouching for your honesty and trustworthiness are acceptable.
  • Don't perfect your profile for weeks; aim for 'just above embarrassing,' get it approved, and start sending proposals immediately—that's where clients actually come from.
  • Focus the overview on the results and problems you solve for clients, not on your qualifications or subjective self-descriptions, and end with a clear call to action prompting them to message you.
  • Write your overview in a word processor or Gmail draft (not directly in Upwork's text box) and use Grammarly to catch grammatical errors, which can immediately turn off potential clients.
Concepts 12
Upwork Profile Overview Section
1 videos Core

The written summary section of an Upwork freelancer profile that serves three key purposes: getting the profile approved, convincing clients who view it to take the next step, and signaling to Upwork's algorithm what jobs to match you with.

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Results-Focused Copywriting
1 videos Core

A writing approach for the Upwork overview that emphasizes the outcomes and problems solved for clients rather than the freelancer's qualifications, credentials, or subjective self-descriptions.

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Minimum Viable Profile
1 videos Core

The strategy of creating a profile that is just above embarrassing — good enough to get approved — rather than spending excessive time perfecting it before sending any proposals.

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Upwork Algorithm Matching
2 videos Core

Upwork's internal system that uses keywords from a freelancer's profile, especially the overview section, to match freelancers with relevant client job postings and rank them in search results.

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Testimonials in Overview
1 videos Core

The practice of embedding social proof directly into the overview text — including testimonials from non-clients like friends, family, or acquaintances — to establish trustworthiness before a client scrolls to the review section.

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Upwork Autocomplete
1 videos Core

A keyword research method where a freelancer types partial search terms into Upwork's search bar to reveal suggested completions, which signal high-relevance keywords that Upwork's algorithm prioritizes.

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Proposals as Primary Client Acquisition
1 videos Core

The core Upwork strategy that sending proposals — not perfecting a profile — is the primary driver of landing clients, making speed to proposal submission more important than profile quality.

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Niche Service Description
1 videos Core

Writing narrative paragraphs (rather than bullet lists) about your specific services and niche expertise to both engage clients and feed relevant keywords to Upwork's matching algorithm.

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Call to Action (Profile)
1 videos Core

A closing statement at the end of the Upwork overview that explicitly directs the client toward the desired next step, such as opening a conversation or clicking the hire button.

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Low-in-the-Funnel Client Behavior
1 videos Supporting

The concept that clients who actively visit a freelancer's full profile have already invested significant time and are close to making a hiring decision, requiring only a small nudge to convert.

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Caleb Ulku
34 videos Supporting

The primary guest and SEO expert featured in the video, founder of an AI SEO agency that developed the Core 30 local SEO methodology and scaled to 97 plumber clients using AI-driven content and local link-building strategies.

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Grammarly for Profile Writing
1 videos Supporting

Using the free Grammarly tool to proofread the Upwork overview and eliminate grammatical errors, which are cited as a top reason clients lose trust and disengage.

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Q&A 15
What are the three key reasons why your Upwork overview section is important?

The three key reasons your Upwork overview section is important are: 1) To get your profile approved so you can start sending proposals. 2) When a client views your profile, to push them toward taking the next step (like opening a conversation). 3) To feed Upwork's algorithm the right keywords so it can match you with relevant jobs and rank you in searches. The third reason is the most overlooked and can give you a significant advantage over competitors.

How long should I spend perfecting my Upwork profile before sending proposals?

You should not spend weeks perfecting your Upwork profile. The goal is to get your profile to a place where it's 'just short of being embarrassing' — decent enough to get approved — and then immediately start sending proposals. Many people fail on Upwork because they obsess over a perfect profile and never actually send proposals. You get clients by sending proposals, not by having a flawless profile. Once approved, use your free time to come back and improve the overview gradually.

How can I use Upwork's autocomplete feature to improve my profile's keyword strategy?

You can leverage Upwork's autocomplete in two ways: 1) Search for freelancers or jobs in your field and start typing keywords — Upwork will suggest auto-completions, which signals that those terms are highly relevant target keywords. 2) Start the process of posting a job on Upwork in your field; Upwork will show you a 'suggested skills' section that contains a goldmine of relevant keywords. Use these keywords throughout your overview section so Upwork's algorithm is more likely to match you with the right clients.

What common mistake do most mediocre Upwork freelancers make in their profile overview?

The most common mistake is describing yourself in subjective terms and vague platitudes, then listing out qualifications. For example, writing something like 'I'm a well-qualified worker with six years of experience and always deliver visually impactful projects for my clients' is ineffective because it doesn't mean anything specific. Clients don't care about you — they care about what results you'll deliver and what problems you'll solve for them. Instead, focus your overview on the outcomes and results you achieve for clients.

Should I include testimonials in my Upwork profile overview, and where do I get them if I'm new?

Yes, you should include testimonials in your overview section after the first two or three sentences. Even if you're new to Upwork and have no reviews yet, you can get testimonials from friends, family members, mail carriers, or basically anyone who can vouch that you're an honest and trustworthy person who delivers on their promises. The best testimonials confirm that you're trustworthy, honest, and can deliver what you say you will. Don't rely solely on the reviews section at the bottom of your profile, since clients need to scroll far down to see those. As you land your first clients and earn reviews, come back and add those to your overview as well.

Why do clients rarely read a freelancer's full Upwork profile before making a hiring decision?

Most clients don't have time — they have a problem they need solved urgently. When a client is reviewing proposals, they only see the freelancer's title, not the overview. When they do visit a profile, they are already 'low in the funnel,' meaning they've already invested significant time in evaluating you and are likely leaning toward moving forward. In fact, most future clients will offer you the job before they even read your overview. This means the overview serves more as a confirmation tool than a selling tool for clients who are already interested.

What should I write about in the body of my Upwork profile overview instead of bullet lists?

Instead of bullet lists, write in a narrative style that covers: 1) The results you achieve for clients and the problems you solve. 2) Why you chose your specific niche. 3) Why clients should hire you. 4) What your prior experience has taught you about your niche. 5) The specific services and categories you offer, described in prose. For example, if you're an SEO specialist, talk through keyword research, backlink building, local SEO, content writing, audits, etc. Going into depth about what you've done for prior clients and how it helped them is also valuable. Keep paragraphs to three or four sentences maximum to avoid intimidating blocks of text.

How does mentioning specific services in my Upwork overview help me get more jobs?

Mentioning specific services in your overview feeds Upwork's algorithm the keywords it needs to match you with relevant client job postings. For example, if you're an SEO professional and mention keyword research, backlink building, local SEO, Google Business Profile optimization, and content writing, Upwork's system knows exactly what types of jobs to show you and which clients to suggest your profile to. This is one of the most overlooked advantages of a well-written overview — it's not just for human readers, but also for the algorithm that determines your visibility on the platform.

What is the biggest mistake to avoid when physically writing your Upwork profile overview?

Never write your overview directly into the Upwork text box. Many people lose all their work due to accidental page reloads or similar issues. Instead, write your overview in a word processor or even as a draft in Gmail. Additionally, use a free tool like Grammarly to ensure your writing is clear, succinct, and free of grammatical errors. A grammatical error is one of the surest ways to turn off a client who is reviewing your profile, and it's completely avoidable with free tools.

How should I end my Upwork profile overview?

End your overview with a clear call to action. Tell your future client what you want them to do next — typically, you want them to open or continue a conversation with you. Close by reinforcing that you're the best candidate for their job, that you'll deliver the results they want and solve the problems they have, and prompt them to take the next step by clicking the green 'hire' or 'message' button. A strong call to action gives the client clear direction and increases the likelihood they'll take action.

What happens if my Upwork profile is denied when I submit it for approval?

If your profile is denied, it's not a big deal. There is no penalty for submitting your profile for approval multiple times. Simply make some edits and try again. You can try adding a welcome video, changing your stated experience level, or refining your overview. Keep iterating and resubmitting until it gets approved. The important thing is to get approved as quickly as possible so you can start sending proposals, since that's where clients actually come from.

Do clients see my Upwork overview when reviewing my proposal for their job posting?

No. When clients are reviewing proposals submitted to their job posting, they only see the freelancer's title — not the overview or any other part of the profile. Clients only see the beginning of your overview if they are browsing lists of freelancers directly (i.e., before posting a job), which is relatively uncommon. This is why the overview's primary value is for Upwork's algorithm (to help match and rank you) and for clients who visit your full profile after already being interested in you.

Why is the Upwork algorithm matching function more important than clients reading your overview?

The Upwork algorithm matching function is critically important because it determines which jobs you get matched with and how you rank in freelancer searches — this affects your visibility to clients before they even see your profile. Most clients post jobs and then review proposals; they don't browse freelancers directly. So the algorithm is what brings job opportunities to you through the 'Best Match' and search ranking systems. By strategically including the right keywords in your overview, you signal to Upwork what types of jobs you want, increasing the volume and relevance of opportunities you receive. This is the most overlooked reason to optimize your overview.

What is the minimum quality standard I should aim for in my Upwork profile before submitting it?

The minimum quality standard is that your profile should be 'just short of being embarrassing' — in other words, decent enough that you wouldn't be ashamed to show it, but not necessarily perfect. The goal is to get approved and start sending proposals as quickly as possible. Spending excessive time trying to craft a perfect profile is a waste of time that keeps you from actually landing clients. Once you're approved and sending proposals, you can use your free time to gradually improve your overview.

What is the most effective way to get testimonials for an Upwork profile if you have no clients yet?

If you have no clients yet, you can get testimonials from people in your personal life — friends, family members, former colleagues, a mail carrier, or basically anyone who knows you and can honestly say that you are a trustworthy, honest person who delivers on their commitments. The best testimonials confirm that you're reliable and can do what you say you'll do. You don't need professional clients to provide these — personal character references work. Include these in your overview section, and then update them with real client testimonials as you start landing jobs and earning reviews.