LinkedIn is building a gig marketplace. What you need to know.

LinkedIn is rolling out a gig marketplace to take on Fiverr and Upwork. Whether it can move the needle for Microsoft is up for debate.

Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

LinkedIn is building a gig marketplace. What you need to know.

People love trolling LinkedIn.

The Microsoft-owned social network is an endless source of recruiting messages, corny inspirational posts, and voicemails from Jimmy.

Even so, its business is no joke: LinkedIn has 740m users and its revenue — from memberships, subscriptions, and job ads — hit $8.8B in 2020.

Now, LinkedIn wants to roll out a gig marketplace…

… called, err, Marketplace, per The Information.

The service is similar to platforms such as Fiverr and Upwork, which host freelance work from web design to home repair and make money by taking a cut (13%-27%) of the job.

LinkedIn’s offering will focus on white-collar work such as consulting, marketing, and writing. This is an extension of how the Marketplace project started in October 2019, when Microsoft acquired parts of UpCounsel, a startup that matches lawyers with small businesses.

Combined revenue for Fiverr and Upwork hit $550m in 2020

This is a drop in the bucket for LinkedIn.

However, The Information notes that Marketplace is more than just a revenue-generating opportunity:

  • Microsoft is working on a digital wallet to work across many of its services, and a gig platform will be a good use case for it.
  • The digital wallet will be a source of funds to help grow LinkedIn’s paid content network, where users can subscribe and tip content creators who bring them value.

The jury is still out on Microsoft’s acquisition of LinkedIn

It cost the Redmond-based software giant $26.2B in 2016. And LinkedIn’s revenue growth has slowed from 86% in 2012 to 20% in 2020, per The Information.

Microsoft tried to acquire high-growth business lines in separate deals for TikTok and Pinterest, but neither materialized.

While Marketplace will give more surface area for Jimmy to reach out to people, the reality is that moving the needle on Microsoft’s $143B in revenue is a tall order.

Related Articles

Get the 5-minute news brief keeping 2.5M+ innovators in the loop. Always free. 100% fresh. No bullsh*t.