Land Your First Job on Upwork | New to Upwork? Watch This!

Caleb Ulku 14:26
Transcript
0:00
0:00 Hey, this is Caleb Alcu and today I wanted to talk about getting your first jobs on Upwork's
0:10 platform, getting those first few reviews. Now, if you're new to Upwork and you don't have any
0:15 reviews yet, it's very difficult to get the first ones. Look, I'm not going to beat around the bush
0:20 and tell you it's easy. Getting the first few jobs is hard, okay? Now, once you get those,
0:25 and the magic number is around five between four and six for the vast majority of freelancer profiles
0:31 and all of you know by now that i hate using the word freelancer because that puts you in the wrong
0:36 mindset but that's upwards word so we'll go ahead and borrow it for now but the point of that is
0:42 once you get four to six jobs about five for most new profiles you'll get something that upper calls
0:49 a job success score once you get a job success score you will find your response rates get
0:55 much much higher so yeah getting the first five jobs isn't a lot of fun it can be very difficult
1:03 but it's worth it in the long run trust me my entire agency is built with jobs from upwork
1:10 so let's talk about how i advise people get their first three ways for people to get their first
1:17 jobs okay so one thing to keep in mind if you've seen this before you've heard me mention this
1:23 It's the ice cream truck rule.
1:25 Okay.
1:25 The reason we call it the ice cream truck rule is if an ice cream truck opens the window
1:31 and start selling ice cream, they never start with a long pitch about what their name is,
1:36 where they're from, and why ice cream is going to improve your life.
1:40 Okay.
1:41 The ice cream truck opens the window and says, hey, I have ice cream.
1:45 It's good.
1:45 It's $5.
1:47 Okay.
1:47 So keep in mind that if somebody's on Upwork, they're not looking to be convinced about how ice cream is going to improve their life.
1:57 They just want to know you have it, how much is it, and that it's good ice cream.
2:02 So the focus is to show people that you have good ice cream.
2:06 When I look at profiles on Upwork and when I look at proposals on Upwork, what I see is people assuming I don't want the ice cream.
2:16 They're taking the classic sales approach of convincing me of the value of the service that they're trying to convince me to buy from them.
2:23 But I already want that service, right?
2:26 I posted a job on Upwork saying I need a bookkeeper or I need Facebook ads or I need somebody to do this graphic design project.
2:34 So if you're going to start by telling me how your graphic design project is going to improve my life or why I need bookkeeping to keep everything in order to make it easier for tax time,
2:45 You're wasting your time. I already know all of that. I want the bookkeeping. What I want to know
2:50 is that you're good at it. Okay. So you don't necessarily need experience on Upwork to make
2:58 that happen. If you, you always want testimonials on your profile. You want testimonials on your
3:05 proposals. If you haven't had a job yet on Upwork, you can get, you can quote people who you've done
3:12 worked with in the past and put that on your profile, put that in your proposal.
3:16 If you haven't had any clients before in the past, then you can ask other people to talk
3:23 about how honest and trustworthy you are.
3:25 Ask your landlord, your banker, your real estate agent, your mailman, your garbage person,
3:30 whoever it doesn matter get someone to say that you honest and trustworthy That help Now if you can find anyone in your life to say you honest and trustworthy then I might consider that getting
3:43 reviews on Upwork, maybe that's not the biggest priority right now. Maybe you should re-evaluate
3:49 how you're handling yourself if you can't find someone to say you're an honest and trustworthy
3:52 person. So get some people to say that about you. Put that on your profile. Put that on your proposals.
3:58 Also, if you've never done work before for a client, do the service for yourself.
4:05 Run some Facebook ads, write an article, do some SEO, whatever your service is, do some
4:10 graphic design, put that in your portfolio, show that you have good ice cream.
4:15 Okay, so let's talk about the three specific approaches.
4:19 Now, when I first got my profile approved on Upwork, it was really hard for me to get
4:22 those first few jobs.
4:24 Okay, so I've been there.
4:25 I know what it's like.
4:25 So tip number one, I tried an SEO first. My agency does SEO. So I tried to land jobs in SEO. That was very difficult. SEO is highly competitive. Now, I also have a skill set. I went to business school and I worked for a large company. So I've done a lot of business valuation.
4:45 The competition in business valuation is much, much lower than the competition in SEO.
4:51 So I re-optimized my profile for business valuation, and then I submitted applicants
4:58 for jobs that were asking for business valuation.
5:02 If you actually go to my profile and scroll all the way down, you'll find that the first
5:06 few reviews are for business valuation, not for SEO.
5:10 Much, much lower competition in that space.
5:12 So that's one tip.
5:13 You know, it's okay if your first few reviews maybe aren't what you want to do long term,
5:19 but they're in a less competitive space to just get those first few jobs under your belt.
5:24 Okay, so that's tip number one.
5:27 Tip number two, record a short screencast video and add the link in the proposal.
5:33 What you want to do is when you're sending the proposal, like very early in what you send,
5:38 you want to make it clear that you recorded a video just for them.
5:41 Okay, you want them to be able to see that in the preview window that you recorded a video.
5:47 Not very many people will do that.
5:49 Most proposals on Upwork's platform are copy-paste.
5:52 So the fact that you went the extra step to record a video proposal,
5:56 that's going to get noticed much more likely than just a text proposal.
6:01 When you record that, it's best if it's recorded just for them, right?
6:06 So do a screen share, have the client's website in the background,
6:10 background show the job posting in the background when you look at the job
6:14 posting when you're recording your video mimic the type of language that the
6:18 client is using okay because that'll show the client that you're going to be a
6:22 good fit talk about things that are relevant to the client what questions
6:27 that the client asking the proposal what more information do you need from the
6:30 client to go ahead and look at the next step and actually put together a good
6:34 proposal for a video like that that's how I got my first few responses I
6:39 I literally recorded videos just like this one and sent them as part of my proposal on Upwork.
6:46 Those had a much higher response rate.
6:49 Highly recommend that if you don't yet have the number of reviews to get that job success score,
6:55 to get a good response rate, just record a video proposal.
6:59 But what you should not do is record one proposal and send that to everyone.
7:03 Okay that as bad as a copy paste cover letter template but that doesn work very well You want to show the client that you recorded it just for them it custom for them yes this takes more time of course it does but much much more likely to get a
7:20 response okay and the third area the third one this is a favorite of mine let me actually share
7:26 my screen with you so that you can see exactly what i'm talking about here so if i share my screen
7:33 I'm going to show you a few different searches on Upwork.
7:36 Okay.
7:37 So this third one, I call it laser focus.
7:40 So I start by searching for web design.
7:45 Now this, so this would be, Hey, maybe you're a new freelancer.
7:48 You do web design.
7:49 So you optimize your portfolio.
7:51 You optimize your profile.
7:53 You optimize your proposal all around web design.
7:56 So then some client comes on looking for web design.
7:59 Look at who you're competing against.
8:01 100,000 earned, 100,000 earned, 100,000 earned, nothing for those two, 10,000, 200,000.
8:09 I mean, these are big freelancers that you're going up against for web design.
8:16 But now let's say that, you know, you're very focused on a specific WordPress plugin.
8:23 If you don't know, WordPress is a very common web design tool.
8:26 So Akismet is a very popular plugin for WordPress.
8:32 So if I search for Akismet,
8:34 which you could potentially optimize your portfolio around,
8:37 you can see zero, six, zero, zero, $100, et cetera.
8:42 So much, much $70, much, much less competition
8:47 around a popular plugin versus the broader web design.
8:52 So when I say laser focus, create your general profile,
8:55 go ahead and optimize it toward web design but then you get two specialty
8:59 profiles I would recommend creating both of those specialty profiles in
9:04 hyper focused sub niches of your general profile like Akismet and web
9:11 design another good one is Elementor Elementor is a popular website builder
9:17 on WordPress so you know 20 10 20 0 50 30 a thousand dollars 50 thousand so
9:25 much, much less competition than web design, but more competitive than Akismet. Okay. So I said
9:32 that my agency is an SEO. So here's another example. I type in SEO, I get 200,000, 100,000,
9:39 500,000, 30,000, 200,000, you know, so these are, these are big players. This is going to be
9:45 difficult to compete with if you have no job history. Okay. But now if you know anything about
9:53 web design or sorry about SEO GMB short for Google my business listing is local SEO so I search for
10:02 GMB thousand dollars nine hundred dollars sixty dollars six thousand hundred dollars nothing a
10:10 hundred dollars right so I would create general profile about SEO and then a specialty profile
10:16 about Google my business listings you can even look at Yoast which is a very common very popular
10:23 SEO focused plugin for WordPress sort of crosses web design and SEO and for Yoast we get thousand
10:30 zero yeah seventy six hundred two hundred but the point here is the first few here's four thousand
10:36 the first few had almost nothing and the first few over in web design had a huge amount of competition okay email marketing is an interesting one also if your niche your specialty is in email marketing we got 50 70 30 100 nothing here
10:55 100,000, 500,000. Okay. So now we have to think if I have a brand new email marketing profile,
11:02 this is going to be tough to compete against, but active campaign, which is a very popular,
11:08 very commonly used email marketing platform. So if I would set up my general profile for email
11:16 marketing and a specialty profile for active campaign, then somebody comes and posts a job
11:21 for active campaign. We get six, four, okay, a hundred there, but he's not focused on active
11:27 campaign. He's general email expert and digital marketer. And this one here, automation, creative
11:31 consultant, online business guru. So basically here's an active campaign, but he's focused more
11:37 on ClickFunnels clearly, 60,000, 40,000, 900,000, fine.
11:42 But the top few that are focused on active campaign
11:46 have very low earnings, okay?
11:48 And what's interesting is Upwork's algorithm
11:51 that sorts the freelancers
11:54 is not necessarily based on chronological.
11:58 And it's not based on earnings.
12:00 It's based on how much your profile
12:03 matches what that client is likely looking for.
12:07 for and remember you get three profiles so use those two specialty profiles to laser focus on
12:15 a sub niche that has you know a high enough job volume to be interesting so you can click on jobs
12:22 and search for some jobs in different spaces so if there's one job a month posted for active
12:28 campaign yeah maybe that's not a great great one to focus a sub profile on but if there's five or
12:35 or six jobs a day focused on active campaign, then that's a really good sub niche because
12:40 there's very low competition for that.
12:43 Okay.
12:43 So that's the third and final way, the one that I like the best.
12:47 And really, if we think about combining these three so that you have a hyper-focus sub profile
12:55 for active campaign or for Elementor, then someone posts a job saying, I need help with
13:01 Elementor and you go in and you record a short screencast video that says, Hey, I saw your job
13:08 posting. You need help with Elementor. You know, that's what I do. That's what my focus area is.
13:12 That's where I'm at. Then you're much more likely to get a response there. It's a great way to
13:18 combine that. And even taking a look at the jobs in the less competitive space, right? So if you're
13:24 in graphic design, then maybe you have graphic design. And then below that you have one that
13:29 focuses on logo design or book cover design, whatever it happens to be, that's a more focused
13:35 version of your general profile. Okay, so those three tips are going to help you get your first
13:41 few jobs on Upwork. It still isn't going to necessarily be easy, but trust me, it's worth it
13:47 when you make it there. Like I said, the vast majority of my clients are from Upwork, okay?
13:51 My entire agency is basically built from Upwork leads, so it's worth it. It'll happen. What you
13:57 need to do is be consistent. Keep sending proposals. Every day, send proposals. It shouldn't
14:04 take you more than a few minutes to send one. And if you follow these three tips, you're going to get
14:08 those first five jobs in no time. All right, good luck. Click the button below to subscribe
14:13 if you want to hear more about how you can have success on Upwork.

Caleb Ulku explains three concrete strategies for landing your first jobs on Upwork when you have zero reviews. He emphasizes that the first 4-6 jobs are the hardest but critical, as they unlock Upwork's Job Success Score which dramatically improves response rates. The three strategies are: (1) compete in a lower-competition skill niche even if it's not your long-term focus, (2) send personalized screencast video proposals tailored to each client, and (3) use Upwork's specialty profiles to laser-focus on hyper-specific sub-niches (e.g., 'ActiveCampaign' instead of 'email marketing') where top competitors have little to no earnings history. He also introduces the 'ice cream truck rule' — don't pitch the value of your service category, because clients already want it; just prove you're good at it.

Getting Your First Reviews on Upwork Niche Specialization and Laser Focus Strategy Personalized Video Proposals Building Credibility Without Upwork Experience The Ice Cream Truck Sales Philosophy Caleb Alcu
  • Use Upwork's 2 specialty profile slots to target hyper-specific sub-niches (e.g., a specific plugin or platform like Elementor or ActiveCampaign) instead of broad categories, where you face far less competition from established freelancers.
  • Record a personalized screencast video for each proposal showing the client's website or job posting in the background — this stands out sharply against the copy-paste proposals most applicants send.
  • If your primary skill is too competitive for a first job, temporarily optimize a profile around a secondary, less competitive skill you already have to accumulate those first 4-6 reviews and earn a Job Success Score.
  • Build credibility without Upwork reviews by adding portfolio work you've done for yourself and testimonials from past clients, employers, or even personal contacts who can vouch for your honesty and reliability.
Concepts 12
Ice Cream Truck Rule
2 videos Core

A proposal philosophy stating that clients already want the service they posted for, so freelancers should immediately demonstrate they have the skill and quality rather than convincing clients why they need the service.

View concept page →
Laser Focus Strategy
1 videos Core

An Upwork profile optimization approach where a freelancer creates a general profile plus two specialty profiles hyper-focused on specific sub-niches or tools with lower competition but sufficient job volume.

View concept page →
Screencast Video Proposal
1 videos Core

A personalized video recording sent as part of an Upwork proposal that shows the client's own website or job posting in the background, demonstrating genuine effort and dramatically increasing response rates.

View concept page →
Upwork Specialty Profiles
1 videos Core

Additional profile slots on Upwork (up to three total) that allow freelancers to target specific niches or tools separately from their general profile, improving algorithmic matching for niche job postings.

View concept page →
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.

View concept page →
Job Success Score
1 videos Core

An Upwork metric unlocked after completing approximately 4-6 jobs that significantly improves a freelancer's response rate and visibility on the platform.

View concept page →
Less Competitive Niche Strategy
1 videos Core

The approach of landing first Upwork jobs in a lower-competition skill area rather than your primary specialty, in order to accumulate reviews and a job success score more quickly.

View concept page →
Personalized vs. Copy-Paste Proposals
1 videos Core

The principle that each Upwork proposal must be uniquely tailored to the individual client rather than using a template, as personalization signals genuine interest and dramatically increases response rates.

View concept page →
Sub-niche Job Volume Check
1 videos Core

The practice of verifying that a chosen sub-niche has sufficient job postings on Upwork before building a specialty profile around it, balancing low competition with enough demand.

View concept page →
Testimonials on Proposals
1 videos Core

The practice of including quotes from past clients, colleagues, or character references directly in your Upwork profile and proposals to establish trust when you lack platform reviews.

View concept page →
Portfolio Work for Yourself
1 videos Supporting

The practice of performing your service on your own projects to build a portfolio when you have no client work to show, demonstrating capability to potential clients.

View concept page →
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.

View concept page →
Q&A 14
How many jobs do you need to get a Job Success Score on Upwork?

You need approximately four to six jobs (with five being the magic number for most new profiles) to earn a Job Success Score on Upwork. Once you have a Job Success Score, your response rates from clients will increase significantly, making it much easier to land additional work.

What is the 'ice cream truck rule' for Upwork proposals?

The ice cream truck rule means you should get straight to the point in your proposals rather than pitching the value of your service. Just like an ice cream truck doesn't open its window and deliver a long speech about why ice cream will improve your life — it simply says 'I have ice cream, it's good, it's $5' — clients on Upwork already know they want the service (they posted the job). They just need to know you have it, how much it costs, and that you're good at it. Don't waste time convincing them they need the service; focus on showing them you're the right person to deliver it.

What should I include in my Upwork profile if I have no client experience?

If you have no client experience, you have a few options: (1) Get testimonials from people in your personal or professional life who can vouch for your honesty and trustworthiness — this could be your landlord, banker, real estate agent, or anyone who knows you well. (2) Do the service for yourself — run your own Facebook ads, write your own articles, do SEO for your own website, or create sample graphic design work — and add those to your portfolio. The goal is to show potential clients that you have 'good ice cream' even without formal client reviews.

How can I get my first jobs on Upwork when I'm in a highly competitive niche like SEO or web design?

The strategy is called 'laser focus' — instead of competing broadly in your niche, create specialty profiles hyper-focused on specific sub-niches or tools within your field. For example, instead of competing under 'SEO' (where top freelancers have $200K–$500K in earnings), create a specialty profile focused on 'Google My Business (GMB)' or 'Yoast' — specific tools where competition is much lower. Similarly, instead of 'web design,' focus on a specific WordPress plugin like 'Akismet' or page builder like 'Elementor.' Upwork allows you to have three profiles total (one general, two specialty), so use those specialty profiles to target high-volume, low-competition sub-niches.

What is the video proposal strategy for Upwork and why does it work?

Record a short, personalized screencast video for each proposal and include the link early in your proposal text — ideally visible in the preview window. This works because: (1) Most Upwork proposals are copy-paste templates, so a custom video immediately stands out. (2) It demonstrates that you took extra time specifically for that client. When recording, show the client's website or job posting in the background, use language that mirrors the client's own wording, address their specific questions, and ask what additional information you need to move forward. Critically, never send the same video to multiple clients — each video must be recorded specifically for that one client, or it's no better than a copy-paste proposal.

Is it okay to take jobs outside my main specialty just to build up reviews on Upwork?

Yes, it's perfectly fine to take jobs in a less competitive area that may not be your long-term focus, just to build your initial reviews. For example, the speaker's primary agency does SEO, but his first few Upwork reviews were for business valuation — a much less competitive field where he had skills from business school. Getting those first four to six reviews is the priority so you can earn a Job Success Score, which dramatically improves your response rates. Once you have that foundation, you can shift focus back to your primary specialty.

How does Upwork's algorithm sort freelancers in search results?

Upwork's algorithm does not sort freelancers chronologically or by total earnings. Instead, it sorts them based on how well a freelancer's profile matches what the client is likely looking for. This means a new freelancer with a hyper-focused specialty profile can appear at the top of search results for a specific sub-niche query, even ahead of established freelancers with much higher overall earnings, if their profile is more precisely aligned with the client's search.

How many profiles can you have on Upwork and how should you use them?

Upwork allows you to have three profiles total: one general profile and two specialty profiles. The recommended strategy is to use your general profile for your broad skill set (e.g., 'web design' or 'SEO'), and then use both specialty profiles to laser-focus on specific sub-niches or tools within that field (e.g., 'Elementor' and 'Akismet' for web design, or 'Google My Business' and 'Yoast' for SEO). This approach helps you appear more prominently in searches for those specific topics where competition is much lower.

How do I choose a good sub-niche to create a specialty profile on Upwork?

A good sub-niche should meet two criteria: (1) Low competition — search for the sub-niche term on Upwork and look at the earnings of the top freelancers. If the top results show very low or zero earnings, competition is low. (2) Sufficient job volume — click on 'Jobs' and search for that sub-niche to see how frequently jobs are posted. If only one job per month is posted, it's not worth building a specialty profile around. But if there are five or six jobs per day, it's an excellent sub-niche because you get high volume with low competition.

What is the biggest mistake people make in Upwork proposals?

The biggest mistake is using the classic sales approach of trying to convince clients of the value of the service you're offering, when they already know they want it — that's why they posted the job. For example, if someone posts a job for a bookkeeper, starting your proposal by explaining why bookkeeping is important for tax time is wasting their time. They already know that. Instead, focus immediately on demonstrating that you are good at the service. The other major mistake is sending copy-paste proposals, which get very low response rates compared to personalized proposals or video proposals.

How long should it take to send a proposal on Upwork?

According to the speaker, sending a proposal should not take more than a few minutes. The key is to be consistent and send proposals every day. While personalized video proposals take more time than text proposals, the higher response rate makes the extra effort worthwhile, especially when you're trying to land your first few jobs.

How should I combine the three strategies to maximize my chances of getting my first Upwork job?

Combine all three strategies for maximum impact: (1) Create a hyper-focused specialty profile in a low-competition sub-niche (e.g., Elementor for web design, or Active Campaign for email marketing). (2) When you apply to a job in that sub-niche, record a short personalized screencast video showing the client's job posting or website in the background, using their language, and addressing their specific needs. (3) If your main specialty is too competitive to break into initially, consider applying to jobs in a related but less competitive area to build your first few reviews. Together, these strategies give you a targeted profile that ranks well for specific searches, a standout proposal that gets noticed, and a realistic path to your first Job Success Score.

Why is it hard to get jobs on Upwork without any reviews, and does it get easier?

Getting your first jobs on Upwork is genuinely difficult because clients tend to choose freelancers with proven track records, and without reviews, you have no social proof of your abilities. However, it does get significantly easier once you earn a Job Success Score, which requires approximately four to six completed jobs. After that milestone, your response rates from clients improve dramatically. The speaker emphasizes that despite the initial difficulty, it is absolutely worth pushing through — his entire agency was built from Upwork clients.

What are some examples of low-competition sub-niches on Upwork for common freelance categories?

Based on the speaker's research, here are low-competition sub-niches by category: (1) Web Design: Instead of 'web design,' focus on specific WordPress plugins like 'Akismet' or page builders like 'Elementor.' (2) SEO: Instead of 'SEO,' focus on 'Google My Business (GMB)' for local SEO, or 'Yoast' (a WordPress SEO plugin). (3) Email Marketing: Instead of 'email marketing,' focus on a specific platform like 'Active Campaign.' (4) Graphic Design: Instead of 'graphic design,' focus on 'logo design' or 'book cover design.' The pattern is to go from a broad category to a specific tool, platform, or deliverable within that category.