Jump to content

imagination7413

Member
  • Posts

    12,043
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by imagination7413

  1. Please stop posting your questions in other topics. As for orders, please see: https://community.fiverr.com/forums/topic/282146-how-to-be-successful-on-fiverr-common-questions-answered-and-a-collection-of-great-posts-that-helped-me-achieve-trs/
  2. Welcome to the forums. I glanced at your profile. Be VERY careful with offering AI art. Unless you are training it on your own artwork there can be copyright issues. (Actually, there might still be copyright issues, as the whole realm of generated content is facing major proprietary questioning.) There are a few conversations on the topic of AI here on the forums, if you'd like to read what other freelancers are saying.
  3. Please see: https://community.fiverr.com/forums/topic/211706-are-you-a-new-seller-this-is-how-you-get-more-orders/
  4. Procter & Gamble (as a parent company) have a LOT of 'aww' commercials. The memorable ones tend to focus on day-to-day and slice-of-life, making them feel very real (and thus relatable). Lot in their owned brands, too. https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=procter+and+gamble+commercial
  5. Marketing basics: invoke emotion. The most common for well-known brands are humor and/or nostalgia, but there's some common ones in what I call 'aww' and 'adrenalin'. ('Aww' can be a simple 'cute', but it is also anything that can make you happy-cry. 'Adrenalin' can be both 'action-adventure' and 'scary'.) For example: This commercial invokes nostalgia (Star Wars), 'Aww' (kid playing), humor (dad teasing/playing), and even a hint of 'adrenalin' (kid startles so hard he almost falls over). For another example: That one is almost pure 'aww'. Basically, almost all commercials are trying to get you to feel something. People tend to remember emotions better than specific details. It's one of the reasons big-brands will have continuity in their ad campaigns, to have consistency within themselves.
  6. Before I give you any gig advice, please read the forum rules. https://community.fiverr.com/forums/topic/253722-community-standards-forum-rules-2021/ That said, please see: https://community.fiverr.com/forums/topic/282146-how-to-be-successful-on-fiverr-common-questions-answered-and-a-collection-of-great-posts-that-helped-me-achieve-trs/
  7. Bummer. Sounds like an interesting article. Do you remember the news source? Back to the topic, it kind of ties into the aspect of behavior studies. How it is harder to say 'no' to a person face-to-face, than to a faceless entity. (Especially for people with boundary issues.)
  8. Mind citing this, please? If you want to discuss an article, you should let others know where you're pulling the information from. It's hard to discuss a topic without the source material. As an introvert, I prefer writing more than speaking. But I also prefer long-form writing because I can take my time to think and type out what I want to say, so as to be a clear and comprehensive as needed. However, I also very much like visual presentation of information, because something are better expressed with an image. I'm rather a fan of short documentaries, too. Without knowing your reference, there also seems to be an aspect of consumer behavior and psychology. People behave differently if they know you're trying to sell them something, rather than a topic in casual conversation. That's why most marketing targets emotion.
  9. Your profile shows you delivered an order 15 days ago. And one of your gigs shows an order in progress. As a freelancer, you should have more than one source of potential income. https://community.fiverr.com/forums/topic/282146-how-to-be-successful-on-fiverr-common-questions-answered-and-a-collection-of-great-posts-that-helped-me-achieve-trs/
  10. Why not have a gig just for that? Even if you don't get many orders for it. https://community.fiverr.com/forums/topic/265579-segregate-your-gigs-by-specialty/ There are dozens of profiles with unusual usernames, who've done well on Fiverr. I glanced at your profile, and the username is not what is holding you back.
  11. Please see: https://www.fiverr.com/support/articles/360010509437-Live-Portfolio
  12. I've already suggested reading more threads in "Tips for Sellers". https://community.fiverr.com/forums/topic/73962-impressions-arent-all-that-important-heres-why/ Please stop posting threads in the wrong categories.
  13. There are dozens of free tutorials by skilled artists on YouTube. As much as I agree with the wish to improve education, you can't force people to learn. The ones who want to learn, will. Dedication to self-education, and motivation to practice cannot come from external sources.
  14. Fiverr reminds Buyers to leave a review multiple times. Most Buyers find this annoying. Do you really want to risk annoying a Buyer even more?
  15. Incorrect. The Fiverr forums are on the Invision platform, and thus not connected with the Fiverr platform.
  16. Please see: https://www.fiverr.com/support/articles/4410883326481-Gig-image-guidelines-Making-the-most-of-your-Gig-image?segment=seller
  17. Just to caution you, you will only have five posts per day, so be sure to make the most of them. If you wish to express gratitude for a post, you can use the 'reaction' option:
  18. I would recommend searching for 'excel' and checking a few gigs that look like they might do what you need. Then you can see what category those gigs were put in, and see how well that category might cover your task.
  19. ^ From your forum profile. Fiverr is not designed for selling already made things. It's for people to hire you to do tasks for them, according to their specifications. https://www.fiverr.com/support/articles/360010451297-How-to-Start-Selling-on-Fiverr
  20. Please try rephrasing your question another way, or elaborating.
  21. Consumer education. Half the battle is correctly identifying and defining the problem. (props to @markp for investing the time and effort to help educate buyers) I've shared this video here in the forums before, but it's worth re-posting, because Mr. Scott compares this advent to the rapid rise of of the internet and specifically mentions Napster. That comparison is very good for a lot of reasons, including the legal ones. But also because, yes, industries will die. One thing he only touched on briefly was the rapid 'adoption' phase. That people who use the technology are more focused on the convenience, not the underlying technicalities. That there's little-to-no deeper thought of consequences, legalities, morals or ethics. "Those who don't know their history are doomed to repeat it." Another thing that was mentioned was that he had a conversation with his barber about AI. There's a fairly well known story in I learned in college about business/economics history. I don't remember the details (and might be remembering some of it wrong), but it was about the Great Depression and how one of the triggers was a wealthy investor, who realized there was a bubble when his shoe shine boy talked about owning stocks. He decided it was time to get out, told his friends it was time to get out, and thus triggered the crash, because all the money was leaving. Change is happening. As is the way with business: adapt or die. I can appreciate Fiverr's readiness to adapt, especially as a business that needs to make money for the owners. I'm simply concerned that it could run into the same pitfalls as Napster. Fringe related: One aspect that I don't think has been brought up (because it doesn't really affect us directly), is the Homework thing. (Kids are a study in contradiction. They're smarter than most adults give them credit for, mostly because they can sometimes do really dumb stuff.) One advantage kids have is that they learn fast. More than just kids, though, students will learn things that they need to learn (if and when they want to learn it), and they will learn ways to get out of doing the thing that helps them learn or prove that they've learned (when they don't want to learn, or have trouble learning). Again, convenience. We cannot teach those who do not want (or are not willing) to learn. All the educational material in the world can't force someone to read or understand nuances, if the person plain doesn't care. "A good solution is one that solves multiple problems." I don't have a solution. The best I can think of at this time is a combined PSA/ad campaign. If it was done by Fiverr, Fiverr might be able to gain some goodwill and positive public opinion, but such a campaign would have to be handled very carefully, or it would run the risk of going counter to the premise/concept of what Fiverr is suppose to be. (I can't really say 'what Fiverr is' because Fiverr as-a-business isn't clear on that point.)
  22. For your FAQ section: Q: Does this include fact-checking?
  23. I was about to post an old commercial, then I noticed one of the comments under it, and followed the prompt, and found this:
  24. Figured I'd share my poor attempt at notetaking. I only came up with one major takeaway.
×
×
  • Create New...