Don’t Put These Common Phrases In Your Upwork Proposal

Andrew Michele
9 min readSep 8, 2022

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Writing proposals on Upwork can be challenging, time-consuming, and utterly frustrating. When clients are looking through proposals, they only see about 2 lines of text. They then have to choose to click into your proposal to read the rest and they’re making these decisions in seconds. The stakes are high for freelancers like you and me.

So, to save you some time (and money), I’ve gathered 7 real examples of phrases you should avoid in your proposals. These examples are from the internet, and they are real sentences people have put in their proposals. I even found some of these on blog posts about how to write a successful proposal. Yikes! I’m going to break them down and give examples of how they could be better written.

Let’s get started.

#1. I know you have to read a lot of these, so let’s get right into it.

I see this phrase a lot. The writer meant to sound polite and maybe even show that they cared about the reader’s time. But in reality, it does the opposite.

I’m a fan of the saying, “Show, don’t tell.” That means you need to show your audience rather than tell them. In this case, show them you value their time rather than telling them. You can show them by simply writing a concise proposal. Get right to the point, cover what matters, and move on.

The second thing wrong with this phrase is that you did the opposite of what you wanted. This phrase doesn’t address anything about the gig, and it doesn’t tell the client anything about you. Rather than valuing the reader’s time, you made them read a completely pointless line.

#2. I’ve loved board games my whole life! In fact, D&D is my favorite and I’d love to work on this project with you.

This is an excellent example of personalizing yourself and relating to the client and gig. I don’t know what the original gig looked like, but it sounds like Dungeons and Dragons (D&D) was mentioned. Including that it’s your favorite game can earn you credibility and show that you’re the right candidate. However, the sentence structure and flow act like a popped tire on an otherwise smooth drive.

Reread this sentence: “D&D is my favorite and I’d love to work on this project with you.”

Our brains like to follow rules, and that sentence isn’t following a common rule in standard American English. Grammatically this sentence looks fine. It’s a complete sentence. It has 2 independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction (“and”). Grammarly would add a common, but you don’t technically need one. So what’s wrong with it?

Let’s break the sentence apart. 1) D&D is my favorite. 2) I’d love to work on this project with you. These work as sentences on their own, they make sense, and apart from each other, they don’t seem awkward. The issue is that they each communicate a different point. The first sentence tells us about your favorite game. The second is telling us why you’d like to work on the gig. They’re completely unrelated without the right context.

Our brains put boxes around the different parts of English. There’s a box around a letter (each letter communicates something different). There’s a box around a word (each word creates a unique meaning). There’s a box around phrases and clauses (parts of sentences with individual meanings). And then there are boxes around sentences and paragraphs. Each sentence communicates one thing and a paragraph focuses on one topic. Every mental box has a rule about what it should accomplish, and when you don’t follow that rule then our brains can pick up on it even if we don’t realize what’s wrong.

When the writer combined, “D&D is my favorite and I’d love to work on this project with you.” They combined two separate sentences in the same box. The conjunction “and” is essential in telling the reader that these two ideas can exist separately but also work in one sentence. But in reality, they don’t. So there’s a conflict between what the sentence is doing and what you would like to accomplish.

You could fix the sentence with a simple “so.” “D&D is my favorite game so I’d love to work on this project with you.” That’s a little better because the first part of the sentence makes a claim, and the word “so” indicates a result. I’d love to work on this project because my favorite game is D&D. OR My favorite game is D&D; therefore I’d love to work on this project. Because, therefore, and so demonstrate cause and effect. The second part of the sentence is the result of the first part of the sentence. “And” doesn't represent cause and effect so it throws the whole sentence off. To a native reader, it can read awkwardly.

Here are some other options:

– I’ve loved games my whole life, so I’d love to work on this project with you.
– D&D is my favorite game! As a life-long game lover, I’d love to create engaging content for your audience of gamers.

#3. My experience crafting G&Ts at high-end restaurants makes me an especially qualified applicant.

You could put this in a proposal and be okay, but it’s missing an important step. One of the biggest mistakes a writer can make is making a claim and not following up with the “why.”

This phrase essentially says, my experience will help me do a great job for you.

Your reader will be left asking, “Why?”

Sometimes writing is used to encourage the readers to think. Proposals are not that kind of writing. You don’t want your reader to think about what you mean or how your experience makes you a good candidate. Lay it out for them.

For example:

I have 5+ years of experience with gin and tonics at high-end restaurants. That first-hand expertise makes me the perfect writer to engage your audience of beginner bartenders with genuine and valuable content.

#4. Here are some links to various poetry performances for you to enjoy.

Many clients will ask for samples of your work, check out your testimonials and reviews, and look at your ratings. They’re interested in your experience and your credibility.

If you have to or choose to include samples of your work, they’re not there for the client to “enjoy.” Those samples serve a specific and important purpose.

Your client cares about finding a freelancer to complete a task for them. Writing something like this phrase in your proposal shows them you lack audience awareness. You’ve entirely missed the point on why they’re here and why you’re sending a proposal. They’re not here to read poetry for enjoyment. They’re here to assess whether your skills are the right fit for the task.

Don’t dance around the fact that you’re trying to demonstrate that the client should hire you for the job. Here’s how that phrase could be written better:

You can find 3 of my best poetry samples here: LINK.

Don’t be afraid to share why you include the samples, especially if you’re not linking to a website with written content. For example, some people explain what each sample is out to accomplish, what it achieves in terms of metrics, or something else.

Here’s what my portfolio says:

Here are some of my strongest blog posts. They’ve made the list for many reasons, but they all work hard to drive organic traffic, increase engagement, and build authority.

If I wanted to explain 1 specific sample, I could say something like:

This blog post was based on a popular thought leadership podcast in the X industry. It won the Google snippet within 7 hours of publishing and ranked #1 on Google in the first 24 hours.

However, you choose to frame your samples, remember what the reader is there for and make sure you craft a proposal and send samples that make perfect sense for that client and gig.

#5–7 Thanks for considering me and have a great day! — — P.S. — the proposed cost is an estimate. I could give you an exact figure, timeframe and what I expect to be able to accomplish if we talk. If any of the above sounds interesting, reply to this and we’ll set up a time to talk this week.

This one is 3 sentences long, and there’s something wrong with each, so I’ve broken it into 3 different parts.

#5. Thanks for considering me and have a great day!

Again, the “and” here isn’t necessary. “Thanks for your consideration, have a great day!” would have been better, but there’s still another issue. You never want to end your cover letter without calling your reader to act. You’re here to get business, make money, and build your profile. You can’t do any of that with weak cover letters. I won’t cover calls to action (CTAs) twice, so read #7 for my breakdown on CTAs.

The second thing wrong with this is it’s an ending when it’s not the ending. If you wanted to include this in your cover letter, it should be the very last thing. If you signal to your reader that this sentence is the end, they’ll mentally check out. It’s much less likely any of the content following your ending will get read. In this case, the writer included important information after this sentence.

#6. — — P.S. — the proposed cost is an estimate. I could give you an exact figure, timeframe and what I expect to be able to accomplish if we talk.

This is important information. It was probably a good thing to include for this writer. However, I wouldn’t have put it as a postscript (P.S.).

Postscripts come from handwritten letters. You would include a P.S. after your signature to emphasize an important point or add something to the letter. You don’t need that here.

Your cover letter isn’t an actual letter, and it’s certainly not as long as an old-school letter. This writer should have included this information in the body of the cover letter. Or, they could have kept it as the conclusion but turned it into a strong CTA, which I’m covering next.

#.7 If any of the above sounds interesting, reply to this and we’ll set up a time to talk this week.

Unlike #5, which is a very weak ending, this sentence isn’t terrible. But it could be much stronger.

A CTA should compel your reader to complete an action. In this case, we want the reader to interview us, message us back, or hire us on the spot. I like that the writer included “reply to this.” That is a bit demanding, but it still urges the reader to do something we want them to do.

I don’t like how the writer said, “…and we’ll set up a time to talk this week.” Unless you know your potential client specifically wants an interview, don’t tell the reader what they’ll do. You don’t own their schedule. You could actually drive a client away if they’re really not interested in an interview, don’t have the time for a call, or read your response as rude.

I also don’t like that the writer said, “If any of the above sounds interesting….” Like I explained with the poetry, they’re not here to read interesting things. And frankly, if the rest of the proposal sounded like this, I would probably be bored rather than “interested.”

Here’s how I would have written the ending for this cover letter if I were writing it for a blogging gig:

I see that you don’t have a projected budget for this project, so I’ve put the bid at $XX. This is an estimate based on what I’ve gathered from your project details. Would you mind sharing how many blog posts you need each month and how long you’d like them to be?

I’ve been in this situation before, and it’s hard to phrase proposals when the client has left out valuable information in the gig details. In my experience, if they leave out the pricing, they’re cheap. Typically they’ll reach out to me and ask for my rate. I give them my rate, which is way too expensive for them. Now they’ve wasted both my time and their time.

I only recommend applying for gigs like that if you need the experience, have low rates, or have reason to believe that they are a good fit for you.

Take it with a Grain of Salt

That wraps up 7 phrases you should avoid in your Upwork proposals. Some of them should NEVER be in your proposal, while others aren’t horrible but leave room for improvement. Writing proposals that get you hired takes time and practice.

What works for me might not work for you. And what worked yesterday might not work tomorrow. Take everything with a grain of salt and focus on developing your skills and making informed choices by educating yourself with articles like this.

If you’re interested in learning more about how to make money on Upwork, check out How I Earned My First $1,000 on Upwork. With thousands of views, over 1,000 claps, and tons of comments, it’s proven to be a valuable resource for freelancers like you. Also make sure to follow for more helpful content about freelancing.

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Andrew Michele

I’m a full-time freelance content writer that specializes in SEO blog posts for SaaS companies.