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  1. Believe it or not, Fiverr made my dream come true. I picked up my first instrument (guitar) when I was 7 years old, and studied with youtube and learnt from my older friends who were such good instrumentists. Later, I've picked up on piano as well, but I never had the chance to convince my parents to follow a musical school, and had to do it on my own. When I was in highschool, I got myself a copy of Ableton (which is a digital audio workstation) with the allowance money. Since then, I've experimented with producing music for myself, but never had the guts to release anything. The signs were there, but I always hesitated to pursue my dream of composing music for a living. Then, in University, I graduated Law School, and practised law, as a legal advisor for 4 years. The only constant in my life so far, was producing music and experimenting with music and sound design. In 2021, I've enrolled myself in a music production course, and realised that my level was quite advanced, eventhought I was self-taught. That gave me the courage to concieve the idea of maybe I can make some pocket-money out of this in my spare time. Therefore, in October 2022, I've found Fiverr and it's business model of Gigs, and decided to try it out. At the time, I asked my cousin for help, since he knew much more about sales and marketing, and also we were not looking for a quick cash grab. I was in charge of composing and producing the music, and he was in charge of sales & marketing. We found our niche of Video Game Music, since we are avid gamers, and the time spent playing videogames served well on my side, knowing how the music enhances different events and feelings that the game should express, and on his side it helped a lot when briefing with the customers, knowing what questions to ask. We even had some excel sheets with essential questions and flavour questions. We were very organised, and treated freelancing here as a very serious business. We analyzed our competition, learnt a lot from them, and created our first Gig which was priced, of course, at 5$. We've got 3 orders in the first 2 weeks (which was crazy if you think about it), and after that it was radio silence until January. In January we got another order, and things slowly picked up, and by March 2023, we were having around 15 orders/month on average. Then, we hit a brick wall, and decided to create our second gig, third gig and so on, and improve our first one to scale it as much as possible. From April 2023, it really started growing and the orders were quite constant. Unfortunately, in late May 2023, my cousin left since he had to focus on University studies, and there I was, having to learn the ropes of sales and marketing (which I never wanted to do, but I had to do it). By July 2023, the income made from composing music on Fiverr summed with the income from composing music outside FIverr surpassed the income I was having from my law dayjob and made me think that I could do this full time. At this time, I was working 8hr/day at the office, and 4 hr/day in the evening as a part-time job composing music on Fiverr. When the orders were piling up, there were numerous times I had to wake up 2 hours before going to office, to make sure I can create and deliver quality for my customers. This way, some days were 14+hours filled with work, and burned me out a bit. That's when I've took the risk and decided I want to pursue my calling instead of the boring office job I didn't liked. Therefore, in October 2023 I've quit my job and went freelancing full time. The first 3 months were super scary, and I often had the anxiety of thinking I did the wrong thing. The income was low, customers were fewer than before and most of my orders were from returning customers. But I was the happiest man on earth, since I did what I loved to earn my bread. Since I had a lot of free time, I've re-thinked how I marketed myself and did some drastic changes to my offers, my Gigs, and did a lot of A-B testing. In December 2023, being quite unsatisfied with my performance, I took the decision on joining the Seller Plus program and get in touch with my Succes Manager. And God, how the things changed since then. I was blessed to have the chance to meet the most involved person that helped me develop my Fiverr business and presence way further than I've ever expected. Always responsive, always helpful. With the advices from the Succes Manager and the will to risk it all for my passion, I've powered trough and took even more drastic decisions for my 2 most performing gigs. And you know what? It worked! Since then I'm having my best time here and each month is better than the last. Now I finally raised enough ammount of money to build my new recording and producing studio. I've finally received the City Permit (Authorization to Build) and the studio should be done by October 2024. All of this with the help of Fiverr which made it really easy for me (I'm not the most tech-savy person) to sell my talent and skill. Since October 2022, I've completed more than 230 Orders (90 of them being completed in the last 3 months), composed over 300 soundtracks, created sound effects and designed sound for over 100 indie video games. If you could tell my past self that this will happen, it wouldn't ever believe you. I know it's not much compared to other sellers that I look up to in my category and further, but I want to give back and hopefully help the new sellers that just started their journey here, and learn from my mistakes. This is what worked for me: Treat every order like it's your first. I had to learn this the hard way. At some point, after I got a consistent number of sales, I was starting to streamline my process of receiving orders and deliver them. Don't get me wrong, I do believe that a good business has to be streamlined to be the most efficient, but until you're not having 10 orders/day, it's not the case. My mistake was that I was less involved in the communication with my customers, and eventhought my products were higher quality than the ones from my first months of selling here, I wasn't retaining the customers like I did before. I realised that from that period of time (aproximately 3 months) there were only 2 customers that returned, while from the earlier timeframe (before streamlining my briefing and delivering process) there is still a great number of returning customers up to this day. Get involved and understand their needs personally and authentic, and they will stick with you even months later. Be prepared to revise over and over again. Of course I've started with unlimited revisions. After the first few months, I've encountered "that customer" that requested revision after revision and micromanaged everything that came into the production process, to a point where I've asked myself if he's a professional, dropshipping my services. The order lasted 2 weeks over the initial delivery time agreed. I was burned out and made the mistake of letting my ego take the wheel and confronted the customer on his practise. He accepted the delivery, never left a public review, but left a private review that hurt me even 6 months after that order. This was way before the new system was implemented, and with the help of my Succes Manager I've found out there's a private review hurting me like a truck. Now you think, "well, I can limit my revisions to only 2" but that don't work either. I've had customers keeping me in a 5+ revisions loop eventhought my offer included only 2. Don't make the mstake I've made and think the number of agreed revisions will be respected by your customers. Be prepared to revise over and over again each time you meet "that customer", because there will always be one at your frontdoor. Power trough that and provide your best service, since most of the buyers aren't unreasonable. This is how the revision system works sadly, and it's better to addapt and overcome it, especially when you're not like 500+ reviews in and a private one can hurt you even months after. Be authentic. Don't try to copy others in your category. Analyze their gigs, services and offers, and try to do better, of course, but don't try to imitate what they're doing since it's very less likely that you'll steal their audience, especially if you're looking up to seasoned sellers. The market is indeed very plentyful and customers are bombarded with 17.000 gigs when searching a certain category, but don't forget that you're selling on the internet. There will always be someone that will choose you because your unique traits. I've made the mistake to try to do what my competitors do, starting from the keywords, the style of the thumbnails, the style of how they've wrote Gig's description, and so on. Didn't worked. Why would've anyone pick me instead of my competitor who has more reviews than me and it's been there before I was? The momment I've realised this, and decided just to be myself and create my Gigs the way I thought it was good, I started gathering like-minded customers that are returning regularely, and the new ones are pretty much "my cup of tea", with of course the little exceptions (see "that customer" from above that creeps at your inbox right now). Use translation tools. As you might see from my writing, english is not my first language. Don't expect your customers to be english teachers or natives. When briefing with the customer, it's very important that you are 100% sure of what's the task and it's flavours. If you see your customer struggles to explain and you're not 100% sure of what are the fine details of the needed work, don't do my mistake and take the order and find out when you're delivering. You're loosing important time. Your time! Instead, you can see where your customer's from, translate your question in his language, send it and kindly ask him/her to respond in their native language. It happened to me many times that I had to "guess" some specific details, and since using translation tools to make sure I understand what's needed to be done exactly, the revision requests are fewer. Don't try closing the deal as soon as possible. When starting, I was always trying to close the deal as soon as possible, to make sure the potential customer won't pivot to other seller. Don't do my mistake! Make sure you put a lot of emphasis on the briefing process, since (at least in my field of work) customer requests are very subjective. If you're talking about art (music and audio in my case), some customers will see as "perfect" something that you don't. Take your time and discuss every little detail to make sure you understand their vision before accepting the order. It's risky because you might loose the potential customer to another seller? Well, yes, but it's more important to make sure you deliver exactly what your customer needs, and not get stuck in a revision loop or get over the deadline with "last minute details". Remember that every action has a direct consequence on your ranking spot and your gig's traffic, so think twice before saying you got all you need to start working on the order. Provide early drafts. It saves you so much time! With an early draft, you can make sure you won't loose your time in the wrong direction. Maybe you had all the needed details from the customer when starting the work, but guess what? There are a lot of customers that change their mind overnight. Provide them a draft as soon as humanly possible and ask for confrmation, so your time won't be wasted re-doing the job. I used to deliver the work without providing an early draft and it was a mistake. Almost 1/4 of my customers changed their mind overnight and shifted the key elements that we've agreed on initially, and when asking for the revision, I had to change structural elements of my work, resulting in almost re-doing everything since I had to addapt the rest of the work to their new requests. Educate your customers. I was just delivering the order and hoped for a returning customer. It was lazy, and it was a mistake. Before/When delivering, try to put together a small debrief on what you've actually done in your work. Your customers aren't stupid and eventhought you're an expert on your field, you could be surprised on how much your customers can learn from you and how that can beneffit you on future orders. Not long ago I've started sending my customers an explanation text with what instruments I've used, why I've used them, what's their role, what's the musical theory behind the composition and what's my personal take on all those things. This thing works! Next time you're collaborating, you'll have a much easier time to transpose customer's vision into your service, because they will know how to answer your specific questions! Give your customers some options You have that potential customer that wants to buy your 50$ service, but his budget is only 35$? I used to turn down those customers since my highest discount rate was at 20% and that way I lost potential returning customers! It was a mistake. Instead, at some point I've decided I'll take those requests, but I'll double down on the delivery time. Instead of 5 days delivery time, offer it in 10 days. That way, you will not loose a potential returning customer and you won't have to fit that project into your main scheddule. You can do it whenever you have a spare hour or two, since your delivery time is doubled! It works like a charm to me, and you'll be shocked on how many customers are not in a rush, eventhought they say so in their first message. Time is money, friend! Collect your own data I made the mistake on relying on memory and on the data shown by analytics to drive my business. Don't do that. It will save you a lot of time and you'll make informed decisions if you make your own spreadsheed with everything that happens with a relevancy for your Gigs. Try to track the most important stuff, such as: keywords performance, new customers/time frame, returning customers/time frame, types of projects done, the most asked questions or inquiries by your customers, orders that landed you tips and WHY that happened, changes made to the gig related to key factors etc. Be patient If you're treating every order like it's your first order, it's impossible not to grow. Don't make the mistake I've done by panicking when orders are not coming. It's not worth your time and your mental health. Instead, be patient, do your best on the services you provide, and try to slowly build your returning customer base. The best you can do proactively, is to fine-tune your Gigs, but be careful with that, since back-to-back changes might screw up the ranking algorithm (source for this is my Succes Manager). If you're looking to do A-B testing, wait at least 3-4 weeks in between, to have at least the minimum data to compare. I feel like there are much more to be told, but I just realised this post will take an eternity to read anyway, so I'll stop for now. I really hope my journey of pursuing my dream with Fiverr's help can motivate you and give you the strenght to power-trough rough moments, and that you can find something positive in the lessons I've learnt from my mistakes. Don't give up, and trust your skills and talent!
  2. I read this as it's aimed for Buyers to share their experience with Fiverr's talent, but the Customer I've worked with on my most impressive project don't browse the forum, so I'll talk about it myself: I was contacted in May 2023 by the Dev. team of Transhuman Design to help with the full soundtrack for their (at the time) in development game named Maniac. We've worked together from May to August, and I've composed and produced 14 Soundtracks for the Maniac video game. The most notable feature of the music aspect was the dynamic integration and interactive characteristic while implementing into the gameplay. Since the game puts you trough different stages of danger (you can see them as levels), the music should change accordingly, but without any pauses. Therefore, I created soundtracks for every stage that's present in the game (e.g. Police Chase, Low Health, Combo, Rampage etc.) and for them to be able to change seamlesly deppending on the event happening in the game, I've created over 30 short 4-8 measure transitions (I called them Buffers), that were coded by the devs. to play whenever the event changes, and the next soundtrack is played. It was one of my best experiences working with a dev. team, and for sure one of the most challenging projects due to the fact that the soundtracks and transitions had to be interactive with the ingame events, without stoping at all. Maniac was released by the publisher Skystone Games in March 2024, and it is a real succes, having around 700 reviews on Steam, with an average rating of 9,3/10, and an amazing playerbase on the official discord server! https://store.steampowered.com/app/1482380/Maniac/ The game was also featured on many respectable youtube channels and twitch streams and it was very well received by the audience! I couldn't be more proud of the team from Transhuman Design (especially M.M.) and their dev. skills & creativity, and also of the real good marketing job done by Skystone Games. For me, it's the project I'm most proud of, since it was my First big project on Fiverr that succeded. I'm so glad I had the opportunity to work with them, and that Fiverr paved the way for our collaboration!
  3. Preparing your Fiverr Profile Description (and, if you would like, an accompanying video) might seem intimidating at first, but there’s good news! Introducing yourself to potential customers is an important part of building a presence on Fiverr. Your profile description and Intro Video have a similar goal—to give potential Buyers a sense of who you are—not only what you can do. This is a significant opportunity to set yourself apart from the competition and project confidence in your ability to meet the Buyer’s needs. You won’t simply list your qualifications but discuss your success—why people love your work and how much you enjoy delivering a quality job to your Buyers. You may have many competitors on Fiverr with similar experiences, but only some will welcome Buyers and make sure they feel comfortable about spending their hard-earned money. Putting that extra effort into your profile can make a difference in converting a shopper into a Buyer. Likewise, creating a short video introduction can also have a major impact on your sales. While you may initially feel hesitant about looking into a camera and “trying to talk naturally,” here are a few pointers to keep in mind. 1. Don’t make your introduction too long or too complicated. Instead, keep your video under a minute and focus on a simple outline: A greeting, a short description, and an expression of why you love doing what you do. 2. Be upbeat. A smile and a good tone can go a long way to make Buyers feel welcome to your Gig and start connecting with you to be the expert that they will choose. Be conversational—in other words, speak as if you’re introducing yourself to a new friend. You’re not making a speech. Instead, you’re telling a story. 3. Be conversational—in other words, speak as if you’re introducing yourself to a new friend. You’re not making a speech. Instead, you’re telling a story. If you’re uncomfortable, practice telling a friend about your Fiverr account. While it may seem unusual, the key to appearing comfortable on camera is to remember that you’re talking to a person. So look at the camera—but don’t talk into it—always speak to the Buyer. Buyers love to see samples of previous work so you can include some samples of previous work in the background of the video as you speak. A similar format can be followed for the Gig’s Videos which can increase your conversion especially with business Buyers that will often want to get to know more about the Seller before placing an order. Want to read more? Check out this additional articles from our Resource Center: Description & FAQs For Conversion Changes I Made To My Gig Images to Attract More Clients And here from our Help Center: Adding a Video to your Gig Best practices for new Fiverr Sellers: Gigs Creating a Fiverr Pro Gig
  4. I am on Fiverr from 2018. My account was a mature and I was earning a handsome amount from here. 5-6 months ago, on that month, I even did a business of more than 2000$ but suddenly my account de-ranked. Even I got 5 stars on all orders and later those buyers came to me for more work. I don't know what happened suddenly with my account? I was getting 800-900 impressions on my gigs daily and now I am only getting 5-10 impressions. I have tried my best to change and apply everything, (I am SEO guy as well), so tried every trick but not getting results. Even non of my gig is on the first 20 pages in any keyword. Anyone here who faced same situation and get out of this with a positive results? Or someone who can help me to get out of this? Thank you and I look forward to see valuable suggestions from you guy. Kind regards,
  5. I'm having an issue publishing my gig, i press submit and it doesn't do anything or give me any errors to correct, this is my first gig, contacted support but no response
  6. i just got my fiverr first order and after delivering that my gigs impressions are decreasing I don't know when will I get another order what will I do to increase the impressions again
  7. As part of our ongoing efforts to enhance the forum, we are planning updates to ranks and badges and would love your feedback before we start this next change. First off, we will be condensing the ranks to enhance their significance and manageability. The new ranking system will include five ranks: Newbie, Rising Star, Experienced, Mentor, and Veteran. The exact amount of points required for each rank is still being determined, but we would like to note that after we implement the changes, you will notice your ranking adjust accordingly. Additionally, we plan to simplify the amount of available badges, so that users will be able to earn the following badges: First Post- Awarded upon a user's first thread creation. Well Followed- Awarded when a user gains at least 15 followers. Conversation Starter- Awarded to users who start five or more threads. Dedicated- Awarded to users who start at least 20 threads. Posting Machine- Awarded to users who start at least 50 threads. Very Popular- Awarded to users who receive 25 comments or more on a thread they've started. Active Contributor- Awarded to users who post at least 30 comments. These badges will be automatically granted when users meet the specified requirements. Additionally, moderators will be able to manually award badges such as Community Champion, Best Answer, and Most Valuable Feedback. Plus, to ensure only factual information is being disseminated throughout the forum, moderators will begin correcting inaccurate posts and then marking them with a “Fiverr Official Edit” icon. These changes aim to create a more enjoyable and user-friendly forum. We welcome your thoughts on these upcoming adjustments!
  8. You can either write an email to support@fiverr.com or submit a ticket on the Fiverr support page at https://www.fiverr.com/support_tickets. Also, mentioning a user's name is against the forum rules, so it would be best to avoid referring to anyone by username.
  9. I just saw your profile. You have successful gigs and quite a brand yourself. Sellers like you can afford to lose a few clients. But what about us who are just starting? Nobody believes us! AI-written content can easily rank on Google. I have my own affiliate website. In the beginning, I used to write everything myself. Then, after completing a small course and doing some research, I discovered that AI-generated content of good quality can attract organic readers and generate sales. I sometimes use AI tools to write for my blog, and the articles rank well too! But the problem arises when clients, who may not even read the content they're buying or can't judge its quality, refuse to understand the situation. Once, I encountered a client who demanded a 100% perfect Grammarly report (a tool that detects grammar errors). Firstly, I was confident that I DID NOT need the tool because I am proficient in English writing. There's no chance it will find errors in my writing. However, when I delivered the content, the client sent me a report highlighting grammar errors - clarity issues, tone suggestions, redundancies, and more ( In short, more trash). She canceled the order. I purchased a subscription to Grammarly to see what the problem was. I found the tool to be another trash, as it flagged words like 'probably' and 'definitely' as errors. To understand my client's demand, I copied and pasted an article from the client's website to check its grammar, and it showed 100% correctness on Grammarly. However, the content was boring to read and quite weird too. You know, AI isn't the problem; it's the minds that aren't ready to accept change that pose the main issue. It's a sad reality and I can't afford to lose clients or the $5 they pay me. Got a big tummy to feed and lots of bills to pay 😞
  10. Hi everyone - I am Mark Turner -- originally from New York but have been in Singapore most of the past 22 years, with a few years in Australia as well. I joined Fiverr as an affiliate back in January -- over 300 registrations and 1 FTB commission so far; set up my first gigs as a seller late last month and 2 more this month. Still awaiting my first engagement but I've been actively promoting on FB and other networks, so I expect it to be within the next few weeks. I hope to remain active on Fiverr long term...nearing retirement within the next few years and looking for a "side hustle" to keep me busy -- which hopefully develops into something more substantial.
  11. I have opened fiverr account almost one year and some buyer knock but they didn't order after that now no buyer knock and impressions and clicks are going down so much can anyone help me what should I do plz suggest It will be very good if you give.
  12. Hi! You know when we ask for revisions, we can place a red dot on the area and make a comment... On my laptop that system works just fine. But on my new computer, the "red dot system" doesn't work. Does anyone know what might be wrong with my system settings, what I can change to make it work?? Thank you!
  13. Hi! I’m Antonio and I’m a graphic designer from Ibiza, Spain, and although I registered in 2020, it has not been until this April that I have published my first gigs. Although I know that the road is slow and patience is important, I was happy to see that one of my gigs about illustration of children's books has had a pretty good ratio of visits and clicks, which has encouraged me, so I hope everything goes well and above all to learn and also to know the work of so many talented people around here. I send you greetings and I hope to read about you.
  14. Hello everyone, I'm reaching out here for the first time, though I've been an active reader for quite a while. Lately, I've been facing a challenge with a significant drop in orders, particularly in the category of "intro and outro" videos. As a 2nd level seller with a success score of 8, this month has been unexpectedly tough for me. I've noticed a drastic decline in the visibility and clicks for my services on Fiverr. Specifically, my primary Gig in advertising is suffering, receiving only 2-3 clicks per day. This decline has led to a notable decrease in sales over the past few days, leaving me quite concerned. I've been trying to understand the cause behind this downturn. About three weeks ago, I made a change to one of my Gigs by activating the "request order" feature. However, I decided to revert this change and deactivate the feature around 4-5 days ago. Could this adjustment have triggered any changes in the algorithm, affecting my Gig's performance? Or could this decline be attributed to seasonal factors? Previously, my Gig consistently appeared on the first page of search results when users searched for terms like "intro" and "outro." However, I've noticed it now appears on the 2nd and 3rd pages, which is concerning. I would truly appreciate any insights or assistance you can provide on this matter.
  15. Hello, I provide company registration services, the clients who don't have address are required to get the address first. The virtual address providers require clients to appear in interview before getting it. How can i manage it? if i do it on my own laptop, then i can't switch to their laptop for interview. The only solution which came to my mind (you may guide me if you have any) is to get it through client laptop. My question, is it allowed to get client workstation access?If yes, then how? Before replying please keep in mind that it must be according to fiverr policy and terms and conditions. Thanks, Raja
  16. In addition to my existing gigs, I also do affiliate marketing for Fiverr. I have 300+ registrations, with 1 FTB commission so far. It is my understanding that "no" countries/markets are specifically banned. Most of my registrations are Middle East to Indian Subcontinent region, with a few in Africa and several elsewhere. My first FTB comes from Africa. There are some markets I deliberately avoid due to international political sanctions imposed at various levels; but as long as there is not explicit policy or exclusion from Fiverr's perspective, I will continue with my current target markets. Anyone have any comments or insights that they would like to share?
  17. So I just posted a request for the first time, and I assumed I would be able to see this somewhere, and maybe get info on how many people had seen it, number of responses, etc. But I can't seem to find this anywhere? So where can I see information about requests I've put out? Is this not possible?
  18. My gig comes on the first page with some keywords, even within 50 thousand gigs, but there is no impression, why is this problem?
  19. That's DNS, not VPN. And yes, you can use any DNS you prefer. As for a VPN, that might lead to issues like the system flagging you for "Location inconsistencies." You're not allowed to use tools that might mislead buyers about your location. According to support, using a VPN isn't strictly banned, but it's discouraged because it can cause problems like that. Personally, I avoid using a VPN because it's not more secure (almost all traffic over the Internet today is encrypted, even without a VPN) and it doesn't make you anonymous like so many people seem to think. Those are just myths spread by VPN companies to get you to spend money on something you probably don't need. The only real use for a VPN, aside from tunneling into networks for work (some servers require you to tunnel into the network at your workplace to access the system), is to change your location to access content you're not supposed to or to hide your real IP if you're doing something nefarious online. And that’s exactly what Fiverr doesn’t want you to do. Sure, there are some outlier cases here, like streamers having to mask their IP to avoid getting swatted and so on, but in most cases, all a VPN does is tunnel your traffic through them, adding another layer of encryption that's not needed in most cases. VPN providers will tell you that they stop people from snooping your data, but that's exactly what HTTPS does by default. And yes, it does so even on public wifi. As long as your connection is via HTTPS and not just HTTP, your info is encrypted. As for VPNs stopping your ISP from "selling your data", there are laws against that in most countries and even when you're in a country where that's not the case, it doesn't stop your VPN provider from selling your data instead. Remember, using a VPN might make you share an IP with thousands of others, which could even lead Fiverr to suspect you have multiple accounts, potentially resulting in a ban. So I'd avoid them if you can. Changing your DNS doesn't alter your IP. It just changes the server your computer contacts for directions on the Internet. It could help avoid DNS blocks (some ISPs block certain services via their DNS due to government requirements, and one example of this would be a certain pirate website in Scandinavia being blocked via DNS). Some DNS providers even help you avoid dangerous websites, but that's usually something your ISP does just as well if they're any good. Some DNS servers, like 1.1.1.1, may offer faster service for some users. So, there are benefits to not using your ISP’s DNS. A VPN, not so much, unless you want to mask your IP. The question is: why would you do that?
  20. If support team said it's final decision then nothing is going to change. It's better for you to start in a new way.
  21. It took them 2 months to change the analytics page, so... Maybe they'll change this one on May 1st, maybe 2 months later.
  22. Today I already changed my internet provider company, now I am using a different internet (Wi-Fi), From now on I am continue internet from this provider. So, is there any problem with my Fiverr account??
  23. WOW! Shouldn't be change so frequently, maximum twice a week if it's needed to change.
  24. After putting a lot of my time learning, researching, reading and testing Success Score it's clear it has some major flaws. I have my own ways to test and determine it, and I can guarantee you without any percentage of doubt that Fiverr's AI that determines Success Score is both poorly designed and poorly programmed. Unless Fiverr has shady intentions to let a bunch of their sellers and buyers go and find other platforms, it HAS TO change with urgency. It's clear that the way Success Score is working today is doing significant harm not only to sellers but to buyers as well. Suddenly loyal buyers are seeing their trusted sellers levels decreasing, and the majority of buyers don't have enough information about Success Score, so they probably assume something is wrong. Basicly it's bad for veteran sellers, it's bad for new sellers, it's bad for veteran buyers, and it's bad for new buyers. We don't need and we don't want AI to determine our Success Score. I suggest Fiverr let this metric go or revamp it to remove AI somehow. And as a loyal seller of this platform I also suggest doing it FAST, because harm is being done to buyers, sellers and Fiverr itself everyday. So Fiverr, this new metric is being criticized by a decent amount of users for a relatively long time, we demand an answer by your side. What are you going to do about it?
  25. I have not received any order yet. If I change the gig image at this time, will there be any problem?
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