n/a, Freelancer
n/a, Freelancer is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at n/a, Freelancer.
n/a, Freelancer is a company.
Key people at n/a, Freelancer.
Freelancer.com is the world's largest freelancing and crowdsourcing marketplace, connecting over 85 million employers and freelancers across 247 countries for jobs in software development, writing, design, engineering, marketing, and more.[2][5] It operates as a virtual platform where clients post projects, freelancers bid competitively, and payments are facilitated upon completion, charging fees like 10% on fixed-price jobs (minimum $5) or hourly earnings.[1][2] Headquartered in Sydney, Australia, with global offices, the publicly traded company (ASX: FLN) boasts 49 million registered users and 19 million job postings, powering the gig economy by democratizing access to remote talent.[1][2][7]
Freelancer.com was founded in 2009 by Matt Barrie, a tech entrepreneur and current CEO, who acquired the existing site GetAFreelancer.com after personally using it to quickly complete a data entry project that had stalled for months.[1][3][4] Barrie, with prior experience founding Sensory Networks (acquired by Intel) and teaching at the University of Sydney, saw the potential for an "eBay for jobs and services."[3][4] The company rapidly expanded through strategic acquisitions, including EUFreelance.com (2004, Sweden), Scriptlance.com (2001, Canada), vWorker, Freelancer.de, and others like The Warrior Forum in 2014 for $3.2M, evolving from a single marketplace into a global network operating in 34 languages, 21 currencies, and 44 regional sites by 2016.[2][5]
Freelancer.com rides the explosive growth of the gig economy, fueled by remote work trends post-pandemic and the rise of distributed teams seeking cost-effective global talent.[1][2] Its timing capitalized on early online outsourcing (acquiring 2000s pioneers), positioning it amid market forces like digital transformation, AI-driven skill demands, and platforms lowering barriers for SMEs in emerging markets like India and Latin America.[2][4][5] By enabling millions of projects in diverse sectors, it influences the ecosystem by standardizing freelance hiring, fostering skill-matching at scale, and proving crowdsourcing's viability for everything from data entry to engineering.[1][2]
Freelancer.com's dominance positions it to expand with AI tools for bid matching, deeper enterprise integrations, and growth in high-demand areas like AI development and green tech gigs. Trends like hybrid work and economic pressures on full-time hiring will amplify its role, potentially through more acquisitions or Web3 freelancing features. As the gig market matures toward $455B globally by 2025, its influence could evolve into a full talent OS, sustaining leadership if it innovates on user fees and competition from Upwork or Fiverr—echoing its origin as the ultimate connector of global opportunity.[1][2][4]
Key people at n/a, Freelancer.