The number is around 70%. I mean 70% of upwork jobs now close without hiring anyone. And that's a very bad thing.
For freelancers that are bidding every now and then. So your connect gets to go to waste. And this costs real money.
And they just vanish just like that into thin air. And even when you are boosting your proposal, Upwork owns the data and shows it to everyone. And it only increases your hiring rate to around 24%.
Meaning if you win 10 jobs so candidly, boosting might get you 12 or 13 of it. This mass is not a good one. But it's not lying either.
The traditional apply everywhere strategy is a losing game. Most freelancer now do not treat connect like a lottery ticket. And they see vaguely relevant job.
They fire up a templated proposal that is roughly the same to the other person who is sending. As much as your competitor. And hope something stick out, something makes them different.
Whereas everybody is still the same since everyone is using the template proposal. And AI to write their proposal. There is hope in this strategy.
And it is an expensive, wishful thinking. Quality consistently outperform quantity on Upwork. As it is growing presently.
And when you apply for jobs where your profile doesn't naturally align. Especially when it comes to your skill and your job success score. Everything does not align to the client's seeking.
You are not just wasting connect, you are training yourself to accept rejection as normal. The real breakthrough happens when you flip the script entirely. Instead of asking, could I do this job? Start asking, does this job naturally fit my profile in a way that triggers Upwork machine algorithm? Because here is what most freelancer miss.
Clients aren't scrolling through hundreds of proposals. They are looking at the handful that Upwork algorithm suffers first. And those are the boosted proposal.
Followed by the ones that are best match. Whenever Upwork give you the best match badge. Is their own way of telling you that this freelancer's profile.
Align closely with what you are actually looking for. I mean your job requirements. Is the algorithm and people have find a way to optimize and prompt their own profile.
So that it can meet client's demand. And it places your proposal near the top of the list. Right after the boosted submission.
While the boosted ones half the flow. But you can't gimp your way into best match through clever writing. The algorithm compares your profile data, your skills, all the jobs that you have done in previous times.
And the job success score including your portfolio. Even your hourly rate is not left out in this entire algorithm stuff. To make sure that they align perfectly with the client.
This is where the filtering of the strategy comes to play. For example, being a web developer. And specializing in React and Node.js. You are applying for a job that is seeking a WordPress expert with PHP skills.
That is a waste of connect. No matter where you write your proposal. The algorithm won't flag you as a best match.
The client won't prioritize your submission. And you just bond between 10 to 15, sometimes 20 connect. Now there are renowned real-time scanning tools.
That analyze job posting against your actual profile data. And can instantly review which opportunity genuinely match your strengths. Instead of relying on gut feeling or wishful thinking.
You get objective feedback on whether a job is worth pursuing or not. This approach has mid-jump wanting to go from a volume game into a precision game. You are just not sitting there and hoping your proposal gets viewed.
You are applying when the data is suggesting that you have a better chance of winning it. And the algorithm will favor you by giving you a best match badge. Smart freelancers treat their monthly connect allocation like a budget.
Not a subscription to unlimited attempts. They prioritize jobs with detailed descriptions, payments, verified clients. And fewer than five existing proposals.
But even these best practices default short without profile job matching. Which has always been an issue from day one. Freelancing success on Upwork isn't about brute force.
Or trying to waver the storm of rejection. It is more about strategy and positioning. If you do not position yourself very well