
Marko’s Fiverr ProfileDiscovering FiverrQ: Marko, how did you first hear about Fiverr?Marko: Back in college, I was looking up ways to make money online and came across Fiverr through a simple Google search. I had a passion for music production and knew how to use FL Studio, so I thought, why not turn that into a service? That is how it all started.Early Gigs & the First OrderQ: What was your first Fiverr order like?Marko: It took about a month to land my first order. It came from an Eastern European client who wanted a basic remix for $5. That feeling of earning money online for the first time was incredible—I could not believe someone would pay me just through a computer.Building MomentumQ: How did things progress from that first order?Marko: The first few months were up and down. I got a few orders, then one month was dead, then it picked up again. But I kept experimenting—testing new thumbnails, creating multiple gigs in niches like meditation music, lo-fi, podcast intros. That helped me learn what worked.Transition to Full-Time Music ServicesQ: At your peak with music gigs, what were you earning?Marko: Around $2,500/month. A lot of that came from creating original meditation music for faceless YouTube channels. They needed custom audio to stay monetized on YouTube, and I filled that gap.Realizing It Was Time to PivotQ: Why did you shift from music to Webflow websites?Marko: I stopped enjoying music when it became “work.” I even tried automating music generation, but it felt wrong—I originally loved music because it was fun. I wanted to move to something more scalable, more high-ticket. That is when I discovered Webflow. It allowed more customization, and I saw potential for higher-value services.Learning & RebrandingQ: How did you teach yourself Webflow?Marko: I started by creating projects for myself—most of them were terrible at first. I learned on the go, and whenever I got stuck, I turned to YouTube and ChatGPT. Slowly I built confidence.Q: Did you create a new Fiverr profile for Webflow?Marko: No. I decided to keep my original profile and rebrand it completely—new gig titles, new descriptions, new thumbnails. I was worried it might confuse buyers since my reviews were music-related, but it turned out to help.Getting First Website OrdersQ: How did you land your first Webflow orders?Marko: I reached out to some of my old music clients, offering website design instead. Most said no, but a few said yes. That kickstarted my transition. Then promoted gigs started bringing in more organic leads.Order Growth & WorkflowQ: How did orders grow in the first few months of Webflow?Marko: It started slow—1 order, then 3, then 2 the next month. It was not instant, especially since I was still learning. Promoted gigs made a big difference, accounting for about 80–90% of orders.Q: What tools and systems do you use to manage everything?Marko: I work solo. I used to use Notion but now prefer Airtable to manage clients and projects. For scheduling calls, I use a tool called Setmore, which does not send emails (important to avoid Fiverr’s terms violations). And for video calls, I use Fiverr’s Zoom integration—it helps when clients need handholding or walkthroughs.Fiverr Strategy & InsightsQ: What pricing strategy did you start with?Marko: Fiverr does not allow Webflow gigs to be under $80. So I priced one page at $80, then upsold extra pages. That helped build momentum.Q: Do you offer unlimited revisions?Marko: I did early on. One project took six months because of unlimited revisions and slow client responses. Never again. It taught me to set clear limits and expectations.Q: What about Fiverr Promoted Gigs?Marko: Game-changer. I once spent $100 and earned over $2,000. Most of my orders come from them. If you are not using promoted gigs, you are invisible—half of Fiverr search results are ads now.Personal Website & BrandingQ: Does having a portfolio website help on Fiverr?Marko: Definitely. Unlike audio, where clients can just listen, website buyers want to see. A personal website builds credibility and makes you stand out. I even used Vasily’s website as inspiration for my own.Exploring Direct Clients
Podzilla Summary coming soon
Sign up to get notified when the full AI-powered summary is ready.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.

Making Money on Fiverr While Travelling – with Luke Baillie

From Oxford to Fiverr Pro: Denis's Cybersecurity Journey

How Filip Built a $13K/Month Fiverr Agency With His Team

From Freelancing on Fiverr and Upwork to Building a 6-Figure Marketing Agency
Free AI-powered recaps of FreelanceHustle Podcast and your other favorite podcasts, delivered to your inbox.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.