Is Upwork The Sick Man Upon the Silicon Bosphorus? [Looking At Numbers]

Written by nebojsa.todorovic | Published 2020/05/12
Tech Story Tags: upwork | upwork-jobs | ipo | truth-about-upwork | freelancing | remote-work | digital-nomads | hackernoon-top-story

TLDR Upwork’s Q1 2020 financial results are out. The company recorded a loss of $10.2 million or 9 cents a share, compared with a $5 million a share in the same quarter a year earlier. The number of jobs on Upwork hit a low of 77,500 on April 13. Since then, roughly 10,000 new gigs have been added, bringing the new total of available jobs to 87,400. The site reported 643,000 user accounts, or workers, as of this week.via the TL;DR App

Financial reports are lengthy, confusing, and boring. I promise that I will keep it simple, brief, and straight to the point. I will let Upwork’s numbers do all the talking.

Upwork’s Q1 2020 financial results are out. Let’s dive right into the numbers

Numbers Never Lie

First things first, how are Upwork’s stocks doing these days?
  • NASDAQ: Upwork
Upwork’s stocks aren’t an ideal choice for the faint-hearted investors as you can see for yourself. What’s happening with the number of jobs available on Upwork in 2020?
  • Source: Thinknum
It turns out that April was the to-be-or-not-to-be month for Upwork:
On April 13, the number of jobs on Upwork hit a low of 77,500. Since then, however, roughly 10,000 new gigs have been added, bringing the new total of available jobs on Upwork to 87,400.
And, I’m not talking only about the Upwork’s stock prices and the number of jobs, but the number of user accounts, as well.
  • Source: Thinknum
Just before that, in early May, the number of user accounts at Upwork began to grow as well. On March 31, the site reported 643,000 user accounts, or workers. As of this week, that number has swelled to 938,000. That’s still a far cry from the 2.6 million workers the site reported in February, but it appears that things are up again at Upwork.
Kudos to Upwork for doing their best in improving these numbers right before reporting their financial results in the first quarter of 2020. Were there any surprises worth mentioning? Well, I can think of a few.

New Upwork Moments — Direct Contracts

Without any exaggeration, Upwork Direct Contracts are the most shocking novelty. Why?
Communicating with the clients or taking the work outside Upwork has always been a big no-no of their Terms. Every freelancer who works on Upwork knows all too well that these things can get you banned for good. Has Upwork become more flexible?
With Direct Contracts, you can create and send fixed-price contract proposals to your clients that don’t have Upwork accounts. Just like your other fixed-price contracts on Upwork, your client deposits project funds in escrow before the contract starts. When you’ve completed the work, you’ll request payment from your client. Once they’ve accepted your request, the funds are released to you.
Here’s the most interesting part of the “New Upwork Deal:”
As a freelancer, you’ll pay a processing fee of 3.4% of the total contract amount but you won’t pay any freelancer service fees to Upwork. Your client won’t have to create an Upwork account or pay any additional fees, keeping the experience easy to use for them.
It sounds too good to be true, doesn’t it? It almost makes you wonder, why do you need Upwork in the first place?

You Ain’t Lost Till You Hit The Cost

I saved the best for last.
  • Source: Upwork
The revenues are looking good, aren’t they?
Revenue rose 21% from the year-earlier quarter to $83.2 million, pulling slightly ahead of analysts’ expectations of $81.3 million.
Unfortunately, the operating costs are ruining the mood.
Operating expenses rose around 30% in the quarter to $68.8 million, as the company had higher research and development, sales and marketing and general and administrative expenses. It also set aside a $912 million provision for transaction losses in the quarter, compared with $637 million in the comparable quarter last year.
And, that’s not all.
The global freelancing platform recorded a loss of $10 million, or 9 cents a share, compared with a loss of $5.2 million, or 5 cents a share, in the same quarter a year earlier.
Plain and simple, Upwork is spending more than they earn.

The Troubles in Upwork Paradise

Shakespeare warned us to “beware of the Ides of March,” and April, if I may add in Upwork’s case.
Remember April 13, when roughly more than 10K new jobs suddenly appeared and improved Upwork’s stats? Well, it turned out that some of them were fake. How many exactly? It’s hard to tell, but quite a few because this “phenomenon” just couldn’t go unnoticed in Upwork Community.
  • Source: Upwork Community
Eventually, Upwork admitted that they had a serious problem, apologized, “explained,” and offered to refund freelancers.
  • Source: Upwork Community
The fake jobs, or as Upwork formulated it as “test jobs,” problem officially solved.
At the very end, a quick history tour. “The Sick Man Upon the Bosphorus” as a description of the declining Ottoman Empire was used for the first time in the 1850s. It took more than 70 years, give it or take, for the troubled Empire to find the “cure” by transforming into the modern Republic of Turkey.
How long would it take for Upwork to present the positive financial results in every sense and section? It’s both difficult and unpleasant to predict. The fact remains that the growing operating expenses are threatening to cease all Upwork’s operations, for good. And, that’s not good, is it?

Written by nebojsa.todorovic | Guerrilla Journalist
Published by HackerNoon on 2020/05/12