When a marketplace begins to lose its purpose, a certain kind of silence descends upon it. Not the quiet of closure—the lights remain on, the listings continue to pile up, and the numbers continue to rise—but a more subdued, unnerving kind. Through the back door, the silence of irrelevance crept in. If you look closely, that’s about the current atmosphere around Fiverr and Upwork. It’s also worth listening carefully.
These two platforms changed the definition of work for more than ten years. Before lunch, a startup in Austin might hire a logo designer in Lahore. Ten product descriptions could be ordered by a London agency from a writer in Manila by Thursday and delivered on Monday morning.
| Field | Upwork | Fiverr |
|---|---|---|
| Founded | 2015 (merger of Elance & oDesk) | 2010 |
| Headquarters | San Francisco, California, USA | Tel Aviv, Israel |
| CEO | Hayden Brown | Micha Kaufman |
| Active Clients | ~800,000+ | ~4 million+ |
| Freelancers Registered | ~18 million+ | ~700,000+ |
| Annual Revenue (2023) | ~$618 million | ~$361 million |
| Business Model | Service fee on contracts | Commission per gig sold |
| Primary Categories | Tech, writing, design, marketing | Creative, digital, tech services |
| Stock Exchange | NASDAQ: UPWK | NASDAQ: FVRR |
| Reference Website | www.upwork.com | www.fiverr.com |
Human labor, which was erratic, negotiated, and exquisitely flawed, powered the entire system. Something changed when generative AI entered the picture. something that neither platform has been able to fully explain.
Depending on your point of view, the numbers from Fiverr are startling and possibly even frightening. The second half of 2023 saw a 3,037% increase in searches for “AI influencer” on the platform. “AI reels” searches increased by 1,646%. Words like “AI consultant” increased by 689%.
These numbers imply that businesses are actively looking for individuals who can assist them in utilizing artificial intelligence, rather than merely being interested in it. This appears to be positive news for independent contractors. Increased demand, correct? Maybe. However, the picture quickly becomes complex.
The parallel reality that businesses are completely ignoring freelancers is what those search numbers fail to reflect. Without a single human involved, tools like ChatGPT, Midjourney, and an expanding network of AI-first platforms now provide the quick, inexpensive, scalable output that Fiverr built its empire on.
High-performing prompts are sold by PromptBase. AgentHub provides independent agents that manage outreach, scheduling, and content without requiring a five-star review, a revision round, or a brief. Traditional gigs are quietly disappearing due to automation.
The awkward irony in this situation is difficult to ignore. For years, Fiverr and Upwork developed platforms that commoditized human skill, lowering costs, promoting volume, and rewarding speed. When it comes to AI, the same reasoning now works against them.
The calculation shifts when a business can produce twenty blog drafts in the time it takes to post a job posting. The platform turns into the intermediary that no one requested.
Nevertheless, writing the obituary is probably premature. Matti Yahav, the CMO at Fiverr, raised an intriguing point that merits consideration: he contends that companies are becoming less concerned with the tools used by independent contractors. Many clients don’t care whether a finished video is produced using a generative AI suite or Premiere Pro as long as it is delivered on schedule and looks good. He contends that the nature of human involvement is evolving rather than the need for it. The number of people hired to create from scratch is declining. More are being employed to mold, direct, and verify the output of AI.
In one version of the story, that is truly hopeful. This kind of change has occurred in Atlanta with the boutique freelance platform Wripple, which was co-founded in 2019 by former Razorfish executives. AI isn’t replacing freelancers on the platform; rather, it’s helping them refine ad copy, prototype more quickly, and refine design concepts in ways that would have taken weeks in the past. The human remains in the space. simply engaging in various activities within that space.
However, there is genuine tension because of the economic math underlying all of this. In its AI and machine learning subcategory, Upwork reported a 70% increase. This sounds like growth, and technically it is. However, its expansion is concentrated in a small group of competent workers who are adept at using these tools.
Over the past ten years, these platforms have developed careers for writers, graphic designers, and entry-level content creators. They feel much less secure in their position. AI content editing searches increased by 148%. That expansion is genuine. So is the deluge of AI-generated work being turned in by independent contractors who have subtly substituted a prompt and a model for their own labor.
According to McKinsey, 78% of businesses currently employ AI in some capacity. Although there is a lot of nuance hidden in that statistic, the direction it points in is obvious. In many cases, businesses are incorporating these tools more quickly than anyone fully realizes the implications. Additionally, the economics of knowledge work start to look very different from what they were in 2019 when a company can use a language model to draft an article in thirty seconds and then pay a freelancer five dollars to “polish” it.
The quality issue is messy and genuine. Content produced by AI is inconsistent in ways that are frequently undetectable until they become significant. It experiences hallucinations. It is devoid of context. It may exhibit biases ingrained in its training data without giving the reader a clear indication.
When AI-generated articles began to publish factual errors on a large scale and needed substantial correction, CNET learned this lesson the hard way. The need for human oversight hasn’t disappeared; it’s just been repackaged because the risk isn’t always obvious up front. Editing, strategic judgment, and verification. These are the tasks that have not yet been automated and may never be.
The gig economy’s underlying premise that human skill, made globally accessible and competitively priced, would always find a buyer is what this moment actually represents, though it’s still unclear exactly where it lands. For a very long time, that assumption was true. It might still hold, at least in part. However, the floor has moved.
AI-matching tools, AI-assisted briefs, and new categories and features are examples of how platforms like Fiverr and Upwork are evolving. Neither platform can currently confidently respond to the question of whether those modifications are sufficient or if they are merely rearranging furniture while the house changes around them.
Observing all of this, there is a sense that the freelance economy is being resolved rather than dying. Those who are adept at using AI as leverage will probably succeed. It’s more difficult for those who competed mainly on volume and price, performing repeatable tasks that a well-prompted model can duplicate in a matter of seconds. Not a precipice. However, there is a slope. Additionally, it continues to get steeper.

