Fiverr Gig Optimizer

Coach Fiverr sellers (and Etsy/Creative Market gig-style platforms) on gig titles, descriptions, packaging, pricing, gig images/video, search ranking (Fiverr SEO), level progression, and reviewer-conversion. Diagnoses why a gig isn't getting impressions, why impressions aren't converting to orders, why repeat-buyer rate is low. Adapts advice for new sellers (level 0) vs Top Rated and Pro sellers. Use when asked to write or improve a Fiverr gig, raise impressions, raise conversion rate, structure pricing tiers, design gig images, write a gig video script, hit Level 1/2/Top Rated, or migrate clients off-platform. Triggers on "fiverr gig", "fiverr seo", "fiverr ranking", "gig impressions", "level up fiverr", "top rated", "fiverr pricing", "gig packaging", "creative market gig".

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install fiverr-gig-optimizer

Fiverr Gig Optimizer

Coach a Fiverr seller (or any gig-marketplace seller) through the levers that move impressions, clicks, and orders — without giving fluffy "be unique" advice. Built for sellers who measure their work in stats, not vibes.

Usage

Basic invocation:

Why aren't my gigs getting impressions? Rewrite my gig description: [paste] Should I drop my prices to rank faster? What does it take to hit Top Rated?

With context:

Logo design, $25 starter, 3 months, 14 orders, 4.9 rating, 80 impressions/day. Voice-over, $50 base, Level 2, repeat buyer rate 8%, last 30 days 3 orders. Translation EN→FR, $30 starter, new seller (3 weeks), 2 orders, 30 impressions/day. Web design, Pro seller, average gig $250, 600 impressions/day, 1.5% conversion.

The coach diagnoses the funnel (impressions → clicks → conversion → reviews → repeat) and identifies the actual blocker.

The Funnel

Search impressions → click-through → page conversion → completion → review → repeat
   1000               5%-8%           5%-12%             95%        90%      10-20%

Healthy ratios:

  • Impressions: depends heavily on level and category, but 200+/day for a healthy gig
  • Click-through rate: 5–8% (gig image + title doing their job)
  • Conversion rate: 5–12% (gig page selling the work)
  • Completion rate: 95%+ (you deliver, no cancellations)
  • Review rate: 90%+ of completed orders
  • Repeat buyer rate: 10–20%+

Below benchmarks:

  • Low impressions → Fiverr SEO problem (title, tags, category)
  • High impressions, low CTR → gig image / first-line problem
  • High CTR, low conversion → gig description / pricing / reviews problem
  • Low repeat → service quality or follow-up problem

Fiverr SEO

Fiverr's algorithm ranks gigs based on relevance + quality + recency. Buyers search keywords; the algorithm ranks gigs that match the keyword with strong on-platform metrics.

Title (60 chars max):

  • Lead with action keyword + niche specificity
  • "I will design a minimalist logo for your tech startup"
  • Avoid generic ("I will do logo design")
  • Include target buyer if narrow (tech startup, real estate, fitness brand)

Tags (5 slots):

  • Use long-tail keywords (search-volume keywords, not generic)
  • Mix exact-match with semantic-match
  • Update tags monthly based on keyword research

Search positioning:

  • New gig gets a small "freshness boost" (ranking helper for first 30 days)
  • After freshness fades, ranking depends on completion + reviews + recent activity
  • Cancellation rate kills ranking faster than anything else

Title Formulas That Rank

"I will [verb] [specific deliverable] [for your specific buyer]"
"I will design a Shopify product page that converts at 4-6%"
"I will write 5 SEO blog posts on B2B SaaS marketing"
"I will edit your podcast episode to broadcast quality"

Avoid:

  • "Anything you need"
  • "Professional" / "expert" / "high-quality" (filter words; everyone uses them)
  • All caps or excessive punctuation
  • Vague service names ("graphic design")

Gig Image: 75% of Click-Through Rate

The gig image (1280x769) is what wins or loses the click in search results. Most Fiverr sellers underestimate this.

Strong gig image:

  • Sample of actual work (not stock)
  • One focal element, big and clear
  • Branded look (consistent across your gigs)
  • Bold text overlay with main benefit (3–5 words)
  • Niche-specific aesthetic (a logo gig with a Fortune-100 look beats a clipart-style image)
  • Mobile preview check (it'll be small)

A/B test your gig image: swap once a month, track CTR and impressions in Fiverr analytics. The winning image often surprises you.

Gig Description: Conversion Layer

When a buyer clicks, the gig page must answer five questions in 30 seconds:

  1. What exactly do I get?
  2. Is the seller credible?
  3. What's the timeline?
  4. What does it cost?
  5. Why should I pick this gig over the next 20?

Structure that converts:

[Headline: one-line what you'll deliver, with one specific qualifier]
"Hi, I'm [first name], a [credential] who has built [number] [things] for [client type]."

WHAT YOU GET
- Bullet 1 — concrete deliverable
- Bullet 2 — concrete deliverable
- Bullet 3 — concrete deliverable
- Bullet 4 — concrete deliverable

PROCESS
1. You send me [briefing]
2. I deliver [draft]
3. We refine via [revisions]
4. Final delivery in [format]

PACKAGES
[Concise description of Basic/Standard/Premium tier value]

WHY ME
- Year-experience claim with proof
- Specific outcome / portfolio result
- Niche specialization

ABOUT YOUR PROJECT
- Best fit if you [specific need]
- Not a fit if you need [escape valve]

[Final line: clear CTA — "Send me a message before ordering and I'll confirm fit and timing."]

Length: 600–1200 words. Less and it feels thin; more and it's not read.

Pricing Tiers

Three tiers force buyers to choose. The middle tier should be the "obvious" pick.

Tiering strategy:

  • Basic: entry price, lean deliverable
  • Standard: typical project, 2–3x basic price
  • Premium: comprehensive, 4–6x basic price

Pricing mistakes:

  • All three tiers too close (no anchor)
  • Premium too expensive without justification
  • Basic so cheap it attracts bad clients
  • Tier names that don't differentiate ("Basic / Standard / Premium" → renames better)

Healthy pricing for new sellers:

  • Don't go below market by more than 20% to "compete"; you'll attract bargain hunters who give 4-star reviews and demand the world
  • Match category median for first 10 orders, raise after Level 1
  • Add "extras" (Gig Extras) to monetize scope without raising base price

Established seller pricing:

  • Position above category median (Top Rated badge supports this)
  • Use Pro tier features if eligible
  • Leverage "I have a waitlist" framing for top tier

Level Progression

Fiverr's level system rewards consistency more than excellence:

  • Level 0 (new seller): Default. Most gigs start here.
  • Level 1: 60 days active + 10 orders + $400 earnings + 90% response rate + 90% on-time + 90% order completion + 4.7 rating
  • Level 2: 120 days active + 50 orders + $2,000 earnings + same quality stats
  • Top Rated Seller: 180 days + 100 orders + $20,000 + same quality stats + manual approval

Levels 1, 2, and Top Rated unlock more gig slots, faster withdrawal, and ranking weight.

To level up consistently:

  • Never miss delivery deadline (set padded delivery times)
  • Respond within 1 hour during business hours
  • Never let a buyer cancel; offer revisions or partial refund first
  • Ask for review reset on every completed order (in delivery message, gently)
  • Decline orders you can't excel at (decline is better than 4-star review)

The Hidden Killer: Cancellations

Fiverr's algorithm punishes cancellations more than anything else. A 5% cancellation rate cuts your impressions in half.

Why cancellations happen:

  • Bad-fit buyer (saw your gig, expected something else)
  • Scope creep (buyer asks for 3x what they ordered)
  • Communication breakdown
  • Quality mismatch

Prevention:

  • Pre-order chat encouraged in description ("message me first")
  • Detailed gig requirements form (kicks off info-gathering)
  • Clear scope in tier description
  • Send 5-min "I've started" message after order
  • Send draft check-in midway through

When a cancellation looks inevitable, push the buyer to a partial refund + you keep half the work + buyer doesn't open dispute. That preserves your stats more than a full cancellation.

Repeat Buyers

Repeat buyers are 10x cheaper than acquisition. Maximize:

  • Add buyer to a private list/CRM after every delivery
  • Follow up 30 days after order: "How's the [logo] working out? Anything you need refreshed?"
  • Mention in delivery: "If you need [related service], here's my [other gig] link"
  • Build a Fiverr profile that lists your other related gigs prominently
  • Eventually: take repeat buyers off-platform once trust is established (post the 24-month no-circumvention period or via legitimate methods)

Common Diagnoses

"30 impressions/day, 0 orders"

Most likely:

  1. Title isn't keyword-relevant for buyer searches
  2. Tags too generic
  3. Gig in too-broad category
  4. Just-launched gig (give it 2 weeks before declaring failure)
  5. Gig image weak

Fix: research keywords (use "search" in Fiverr to see auto-suggest); rewrite title with 1 highly-specific keyword; tighten tags to long-tail; use a recognizable gig image with text overlay.

"300 impressions, 1% conversion"

Click rate problem? Or page rate problem? Read analytics:

  • High clicks (>5%), low orders → gig page conversion (price, description, reviews, packages)
  • Low clicks (<3%), normal orders → gig image / title

Fix: rewrite the description following the structure above; restructure tiers; replace gig image; collect more reviews via private follow-up.

"Impressions dropping over time"

  • Cancellations recent (check stats)
  • Late deliveries
  • Slow response
  • Inactive (you took a 2-week vacation = ranking ding)
  • Increased competition in your category

Fix: clear up the cancel/late issues; activate "Available Now" feature; make a new gig in the same niche to recover share; drop one $5 promotional package temporarily to bump order velocity.

"Stuck at Level 1, can't reach Level 2"

  • Need 50 orders, not just $2,000 earnings (volume gates this level)
  • Your average order value is too high (good for revenue, slow for level)
  • Add a $5 "consult call" or low-tier add-on to drive order count

Fix: add a low-priced gig variant for volume; price one offering aggressively for 90 days to clear the count; never go below 4.7 rating.

Off-Platform Path

Once you have repeat buyers and reviews:

  • Drop your portfolio site link in delivery messages where allowed
  • For repeat buyers, after 90 days move them to direct billing (Bonsai, Stripe)
  • Build an email list of past buyers; send quarterly update with new offerings
  • Eventually: 50%+ revenue off-platform, Fiverr is occasional pipeline

Be careful with Fiverr's no-circumvention policy. Don't directly solicit existing clients off-platform during the 24-month restricted period — let them come to you, or use their own re-introduction.

Output Format

The coach returns:

  1. Funnel diagnosis — where you're losing
  2. Title rewrite — paste-ready
  3. Description rewrite — paste-ready
  4. Pricing tier proposal — Basic / Standard / Premium with specific deliverables and prices
  5. Tag list — 5 specific tags
  6. Gig image brief — what to design (or pay $20–50 for a designer to make)
  7. 30-day plan — specific actions to move funnel metrics
  8. Off-platform path — when and how to start