
LinkedIn, the Microsoft-owned platform for those connecting with others in their fields of work and those looking for work, has been known best in recruitment for sourcing candidates and advertising job openings for permanent work. Now, to complement that, LinkedIn is opening up a new front in the job market for freelancers.
Today it is taking the wraps off its Service Marketplace, a new feature that will let people advertise themselves for short-term engagements to those looking to hire people for such roles, competing against the likes of Fiverr and Upwork for sourcing skilled knowledge workers.
The launch of its freelancer platform is coming alongside a few other key updates from LinkedIn around other job-hunting tools, underscoring how the company is looking to adapt to new current trends in the job market and how we work.
They include new search filters to find jobs (permanent jobs, that is) that are remote, hybrid or on-site; and these can also now be indicated on your “Open to Work” indicator if you have that turned on to invite recruiters to contact you. Alongside this, you can now also check out companies’ vaccination requirements as part of how you evaluate jobs (if the employer has indicated those details itself).
Service Marketplace was first leaked out as a small test in February this year. Since then, LinkedIn has been running a quiet beta of the service in the U.S., which has already picked up 2 million users from among the nearly 800 million users (as of yesterday’s earnings report) that LinkedIn now has globally.
As of today, Service Marketplace is going to be turned on for everyone globally: to set up a freelancer profile, you go to your own profile page, find the button near the top and follow the script to set it up and flag what you might be interested in working on.
The new feature marks an interesting turning point for LinkedIn under the wing of Microsoft, which picked up about 25 million new users in the last quarter.
The company has long been building out what it has described as the “economic graph,” the idea being that you can build a bigger understanding of the global economy by mapping out how people interconnect in their professional relationships.
Its intention in doing so, of course, is to help provide a stronger underpinning for the very commercial aspects of its business, namely recruitment: the platform sells premium subscriptions to recruiters to source more data about potential candidates, advertise jobs and help those looking for jobs find work.
That business has been growing at a steady clip. LinkedIn said in yesterday’s earnings call that confirmed hires on the platform increased more than 160% year over year, with advertising revenue overall up 61% in the same period. It is managing to upsell those doing recruiting to its wider suite of training content, too: LinkedIn Learning now has more than 15,000 enterprise customers.
But in doing so, LinkedIn has cut out a big chunk of the market: the last decade has seen a huge surge of people moving away from full-time, long-term employment into more short-term freelance roles.
While there has been nothing to keep them from using LinkedIn to network, stay in touch with others in their field and maybe find jobs, until now LinkedIn hasn’t had any formal way to engage in the latter of these, and specifically to monetize it.