company:upwork

  • #blockchain And #cryptocurrency Securing the Facets of Freelancing Community
    https://hackernoon.com/blockchain-and-cryptocurrency-securing-the-facets-of-freelancing-communi

    Internet brought about a new era in the form of communication. Not only it transferred information at a much faster rate, but it also opened a whole new industry in itself. Since the marketing spread its wing on the internet, the cyber world got flooded with numerous online money making techniques.Although most of them proved to be only click-baits and scams, there were few that turned out to be true. As a result up to 30 percent of Europeans and Americans ended up working as the independent contractors in the freelancer community. At the moment, the whole world is participating to earn a few extra bucks doing something they are good at, from their home.But there was a catch, as the freelancer community grew, the number of firms to act as a platform grew as well. Upwork, Freelancer, (...)

    #bitcoin #cryptopayments #blockchain-freelancing

  • Leaving #upwork Neverland
    https://hackernoon.com/leaving-upwork-neverland-764309d0f0c7?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    Photo by Alex Iby on UnsplashI left Upwork after seven years for good.One of these days would have been my eighth anniversary.What happened?Why, oh why?Strike One — The Double Bubble FeeI began my freelance journey on Elance. Then, I joined oDesk. It worked for me just fine. Elance was my freelance plan A. oDesk was something you would call a “sidekick” platform to work on.Then, The Great Merge took place. Upwork was born.To tell you the truth, they did me a favor. They merged both of my accounts. All of my reviews were now in one place. Cool.They also rubbed me the wrong way during this process. The number of my available bids or connects stayed the same as if I were still working on Elance or oDesk only. That wasn’t cool. But hey, I had to live with that.Then, Upwork doubled its fees just like (...)

    #decisions #freelancers #freelancing

  • The Era of Data Sovereignty is upon us!
    https://hackernoon.com/the-era-of-data-sovereignty-is-upon-us-7b9f447cf211?source=rss----3a8144

    But who is going to be the ‘Amazon of Data’?If this is the information age, where is the information getting traded?Fifty Years of Commerce in Three SentencesBoxstores like Walmart had their heyday in an era when it was convenient to shop for all manner of goods in a common marketplace. Similarly, the successes of Amazon and Upwork was to create common (virtual) marketplaces for disparate goods and services. Today, where data is so highly valued, there is a wide open need for a common data marketplace.Data is Already Being SoldData is already being bought and sold. However, it’s largely happening in an opaque way. This is tied up with the complications of who owns the data. Indeed, recent years have seen increasing concerns about #privacy violations such as the New York Times report of the (...)

    #data-sovereignty #internet-of-things #blockchain #unification

  • The Only Time You Should Use for iOS App Development is #swift — Here’s Why
    https://hackernoon.com/the-only-time-you-should-use-for-ios-app-development-is-swift-heres-why-

    The Only Time You Should Use Swift for iOS App Development is ALL THE TIME— Here’s Why!Old programming languages don’t die quickly, but the companies that cling on using them do.Whether you’re a startup, mobile app development agency or just an individual developer, if you’ve not investigated Swift yet, you should.The reason is because Swift not only has the potential to develop responsive, feature-rich iOS apps for years to come, but it has also already taken over Objective-C.A study by Upwork also revealed that Swift is one of the fastest growing skills for freelance developers, app development shops, and startups.In fact, Swift is already being used by tech giants including Hubspot, Lyft, Asana, Pandora, and 1,120 more companies.Thanks to several key features & benefits (which we will (...)

    #mobile-app-development #ios-apps #swift-programming #ios-app-development

  • #fiverr Acquired #clearvoice: Why Freelance Writers Can’t Rejoice
    https://hackernoon.com/fiverr-acquired-clearvoice-why-freelance-writers-cant-rejoice-63aed3ce6d

    Photo by Tim Mossholder on UnsplashIs this the good news or the bad news for freelance writers?Let’s use a common sense approach to come up with a useful and unbiased answer for our fellow freelance writers.First things first, Fiverr and ClearVoice didn’t team up or merge. That’s important to emphasize. Fiverr bought ClearVoice, plain and simple. Truth to be told, ClearVoice will operate as an “independent entity” within the Fiverr business structure for some (limited) time.So, this isn’t a case where oDesk and Elance went through a business fusion to give birth to a freelance platform with a new name — Upwork. This situation is more similar to the one when Freelancer dot com consumed vWorker.Why I’m bringing up these examples? To which extent they’re relevant to the question I asked at the (...)

    #freelance-writing #gig-economy #fiverr-clearvoice

  • Is Now A Good Time To Invest In #upwork (UPWK) Stocks ?
    https://hackernoon.com/is-now-a-good-time-to-invest-in-upwork-upwk-stocks-6e4c5e15d5bf?source=r

    Photo by Rick Tap on UnsplashThis is a legit question to ask for both investors and freelancers.When you examine Upwork’s NASDAQ performance, you see something that’s called the “stock market roller coaster.” If it’s any comfort to you this is a “natural” Wall Street phenomenon. The stock prices go up and down all the time. They fluctuate by default.NASDAQ: UPWKNow, the trouble is if these fluctuations get carried away. So, you eventually have huge differences between high and low price values. If you are an investor who either already owns the Upwork shares or plans to buy them at some point, these ups and downs can be bad for your health. Unfortunately, there’s not much you can do about it or is it?Upwork isn’t the first freelance platform that went public. Freelancer dot com has been on this (...)

    #freelancing #stock-market #investment #ipo

  • #ui/UX and the Company Experience. A refined know-it-all guide on all about the Product.
    https://hackernoon.com/ui-ux-and-the-company-experience-a-refined-know-it-all-guide-on-all-abou

    UI/UX and the Company ExperienceA refined know-it-all guide on all about the Product.About the authorPavel Pekanov is a seasoned #creative Director, Art Director and Designer (and a Developer, but tss-s tell no one). Started his creative career in 2004, followed by the launch of his own Creative Agency in 2008. Ranked a top earning freelancer on Upwork (former Elance) in 2013. Launched a few startups of his own. Featured on CSS Design Awards. Former Creative Director at QUOINE. Pavel has been helping startups, founders and well run businesses with Branding, Product Design, UI/UX and Brand Experience for 14+ years.Personal website: pekanov.comPortfolio website: pekanovdesigns.comUI/UX & Product DesignUI (User Interface) and #ux (User Experience) go along together these days. Thought it (...)

    #product-design #company-experience

  • Two Years an #upwork Slave: How to Own #freelancers and Sue Those You Can’t Own
    https://hackernoon.com/two-years-an-upwork-slave-how-to-own-freelancers-and-sue-those-you-cant-

    Based on handcuffs alphabet by Crystal KentSo, my story goes, one day I decided that enough is enough and it’s about time for me to part ways with Upwork. Once my beloved platform has rubbed me the wrong way more than once. I was free to opt in. So, I’m free to opt out. Right? You are free to join and you are free to say goodbye. This is what #freelancing is supposed to be all about — freedom. Right again? Well, it turns out that there’s a catch — an Upwork legal catch.The Legal Catch 22 — Section 7 of Upwork’s TermsI honestly thought it would be as simple as that. It didn’t take too much time to create an account on Upwork. It would take even less to terminate one. Oh boy, I was in for a nasty legal surprise. It all started with one message I stumble upon an official Upwork’s Facebook page. It turned (...)

    #freelance #gig-economy

  • Let’s Talk About Fees, You Busy #freelance Bees!
    https://hackernoon.com/lets-talk-about-fees-you-busy-freelance-bees-3d6b4fa46518?source=rss----

    The necessary evil. For #freelancers they are always too high. For freelance platforms always too low. Is there such a thing as a win-win percentage?What’s the situation? What can we expect? Are the fees going up or they may go down? Let’s see and begin with Upwork.Upwork FeesOne fine day, Upwork simply doubled its fees. Truth to be told not all freelancers have been affected equally.Screenshot UpworkMany questions remained unanswered. I didn’t have the time nor nerves to stick around and wait. Once you earn more than $500 or $10,000, do you get your money back? I mean, does the Upwork fees system work retroactively? I guess, it doesn’t. The best you can do is to try to earn as much as possible, so you find yourself in the VIP 5% fee zone.Screenshot UpworkWas this really necessary? Well, (...)

    #gig-economy #freelance-fees #freelancing

  • Decentralised Applications and the problem with adoption
    https://hackernoon.com/decentralised-applications-and-the-problem-with-adoption-9cfdaa868b2b?so

    Much has been said about the state of decentralised applications (dApps) recently. Most has been negative, stating that #dapps have, in general, not lived up to the promises from the halcyon visions outlaid in ICO whitepapers. Have these commentators been too quick to judge? Or, are they right and dApps are but a fickle endeavour? Well the truth, as usual, probably rests somewhere between both camps. Perhaps, at this point in time, we should remember the old adage that Constantinople wasn’t build in a day…It took AirBnb almost four years to crack 1m users, Uber similar and the digital freelancing platform UpWork took nearly twenty years, three mergers and tens of millions of dollars to get where it is today. Most of these dApps have only been around for less than a year.Also, although a (...)

    #canya #cryptocurrency #blockchain #application

  • The Rejection-proof Freelance #portfolio Formula
    https://hackernoon.com/the-rejection-proof-freelance-portfolio-formula-c61d21df48c3?source=rss-

    Let’s rewind a bit. You woke up this morning and decided you want to be among the many remarkable individuals who freelance. You proceed to take a look at the fluff-free guide to pre-freelancing. Start to follow it and are now sending out proposals. Life is good. You’re waiting for responses to roll in. You’re amazing at what you do so people should be blowing your inbox up by now.Hours turn into days, days into weeks, and you went from wanting to freelance to filling out job applications. You didn’t realize how much work it was to land a single client. Good news! You’re not alone. Most freelancers hit this brick wall when seeking their first client.I get asked the same question more often than not, “why isn’t anyone biting?” Then I ask them to send me the link to their portfolio or Upwork (...)

    #careers #freelancing #tech-freelance #development

  • Bienvenue dans la « société free-lance »

    Les technologies numériques transforment un nombre croissant de bons emplois en minables petits boulots en ligne. Mais une autre voie est possible

    Au cours des dernières décennies, les travailleurs de France, d’Allemagne, des Etats-Unis, du Royaume-Uni et d’autres pays développés ont été les plus productifs et les plus riches du monde. Aujourd’hui, cette prospérité est menacée. D’où vient le danger ? Des hordes de migrants qui débarquent sur nos côtes ? Des concurrents étrangers de nos entreprises nationales ? Ni l’un ni l’autre : ce danger est auto-infligé.

    Durant la timide reprise économique, près d’un emploi créé aux Etats-Unis sur cinq a été un emploi temporaire, et près de la moitié sont rémunérés à des salaires à peine supérieurs au salaire minimum. Alors que les profits des entreprises atteignent un niveau historique – et qu’une bonne partie de ces profits est mise à l’abri dans des paradis fiscaux –, les trois quarts des Américains parviennent tout juste à joindre les deux bouts et ne possèdent que très peu d’épargne pour faire face à une éventuelle perte d’emploi.

    Un mélange de technologie façon Silicon Valley et d’investissement à la Wall Street impose aux Américains la dernière tendance : la soi-disant « économie du partage », avec des entreprises comme Uber, Upwork, Airbnb, Instacart et TaskRabbit, censées « libérer les travailleurs » pour leur permettre de devenir des « entrepreneurs indépendants » et être « leur propre patron ». En réalité, les travailleurs se vendent pour décrocher des emplois à temps partiel toujours plus fragmentaires, sans aucune protection sociale ni aucune assurance sur la pérennité de leur emploi, tandis que lesdites compagnies amassent de substantiels profits.

    Ces « entreprises » ne sont guère plus que des sites Web doublés d’une application, avec une poignée de cadres dirigeants et quelques employés réguliers qui supervisent une armée de tâcherons en free-lance, de collaborateurs temporaires et de sous-traitants. Upwork, par exemple, est un site Web sur lequel une dizaine de millions de travailleurs free-lance et de sous-traitants tentent de décrocher un emploi. Upwork fait appel à des personnes du monde entier, mettant ainsi les -travailleurs français ou américains en concurrence directe avec leurs homologues philippins, indiens, chinois et autres. Il s’agit ni plus ni moins d’une embauche mise à l’encan, où le moins offrant l’emporte. Ainsi, la main-d’œuvre bon marché du tiers-monde tire vers le bas les salaires du monde développé.

    Ces « sous-traitants indépendants » doivent sans cesse rechercher leur prochain boulot, jongler en per-manence avec les exigences de dizaines d’employeurs qui ne respectent pas forcément les lois sur le travail ou les obligations fiscales des pays où œuvrent leurs employés. Ces emplois en ligne représentent une part croissante de l’emploi mondial. Les emplois bien rémunérés, accompagnés d’une solide protection sociale et d’une garantie raisonnable de l’emploi, sont désormais une espèce menacée. Bienvenue dans la « société free-lance ».

    Montée du populisme
    Si ces tendances sont les plus avancées aux Etats-Unis, la France et l’Europe y sont également engagées. Le McKinsey Global Institute a mené une étude du marché du travail en France et dans d’autres pays, complétant les données officielles par plusieurs études existantes et par sa propre enquête effectuée auprès d’un échantillon de 8 000 personnes. L’étude a établi qu’un quart de la population française en âge de travailler est composé de travailleurs « indépendants » (c’est-à-dire de personnes pour qui cette façon de travailler constitue leur emploi principal ou leur procure un revenu complémentaire), une proportion supérieure de 67 % aux estimations officielles.

    Si l’on en croit l’agence européenne Eurofound, le nombre de travailleurs ayant un emploi temporaire a crû ces dernières années de 25 % dans les 28 pays de l’Union, contre 7 % pour les emplois permanents. Le taux d’emplois temporaires a ainsi atteint 12,8 %. La France, l’Allemagne, l’Italie, la Pologne et l’Espagne comptent à elles seules plus de 70 % de ces contrats temporaires de l’UE. Un nombre croissant de travailleurs complètent leur salaire de base par un second, troisième ou quatrième emploi. Selon Eurostat, le nombre de travailleurs français menant deux emplois de front a presque doublé au cours des dix dernières années.

    Jusqu’où ce glissement vers une société free-lance peut-il se développer ? Aux Pays-Bas, 47 % des actifs travaillent à temps partiel. Certes, beaucoup de gens apprécient le fait d’avoir des horaires souples pour concilier famille et travail. Mais beaucoup, qui aimeraient avoir un emploi régulier, n’en trouvent pas. Est-ce une simple coïncidence si la plupart des régions connaissant le plus fort taux d’emplois « indépendants » ou à temps partiel sont aussi celles où l’on constate une montée du populisme d’extrême droite ? On a Geert Wilders aux Pays-Bas, Alternativ für Deutschland en Allemagne (où 27 % de la main-d’œuvre travaille à temps partiel), le FPÖ en Autriche (28 %), des partis populistes de plus en plus présents au Danemark, en Suède et au Royaume-Uni (trois pays où le taux dépasse 20 %). La précarité nourrit le populisme.

    Il est possible de préparer l’" ère numérique " tout en préservant de bons emplois et en favorisant l’innovation et un climat entrepreneurial vigoureux. Un travailleur qui passe d’un employeur à un autre, ou d’un type d’emploi à un autre, ne doit pas être exclu des moyens nécessaires pour assurer son existence. La protection sociale doit devenir un acquis portable, mais aussi universel, couvrant tous les travailleurs sans exception. C’est un besoin qui se fera de plus en plus sentir à mesure que les techno-logies numériques gagneront tous les secteurs de l’économie et transformeront un nombre croissant de bons emplois en minables petits boulots en ligne. Entreprises, gouvernement et syndicats doivent travailler de concert à l’élaboration d’un contrat social modernisé.

    par Steven Hill (Traduit par Gilles Berton pour Le Monde)

    #free-lance #revenu #protection_sociale #précarité