Freelancers Are Better Positioned Than Full-Time Employees to Thrive in the AI Era According to Upwork's CEO
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Upwork President and CEO Hayden Brown made a pointed observation at Fortune's Workplace Innovation Summit: freelancers are intrinsically motivated to upskill and adapt much faster than in-house employees, which makes them structurally better positioned to weather the uncertainty AI is creating in the job market. Because freelancers must continuously sell their skills to new clients rather than relying on a single employer's training and development programs, they have a natural incentive to stay current with the tools and capabilities the market is willing to pay for. That dynamic is already showing up in Upwork's data, with AI skills commanding a 40% premium in the market and businesses increasingly turning to freelance workers specifically because they typically arrive already proficient with AI tools rather than requiring training.
Brown described a broader generational shift she observes with each new cohort entering the workforce: more people are turning toward freelance and contingent work as their primary career model rather than treating it as a side option. The flexibility and autonomy that freelancing provides are not just quality of life benefits but practical responses to an environment where skills need to update faster than any single employer's training programs can accommodate. For workers navigating an uncertain period where the value of specific skills can shift significantly within a few years, the ability to move between clients and projects while continuously building market-relevant capabilities may prove more durable than the stability of a traditional employment relationship in a company that is itself trying to figure out how AI changes its needs.