— Troubleshoot Guide
Silence after 20 applications isn’t bad luck — it’s diagnostic information. Something specific is causing it, and that something is almost always fixable. Here’s how to find it.
Last updated: May 2026
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Fix the message before increasing volume. Five improved applications outperform fifty identical ones every time.
Twenty applications. Zero replies. At some point that silence stops feeling like patience and starts feeling personal. You start wondering if the problem is your English, your experience, your profile photo, or just that the market doesn’t have room for someone like you. None of those are likely true. The more common explanation is simpler and more fixable: one or two specific things in your applications are disqualifying you before anyone reads past the first sentence. This guide helps you find exactly which one it is.
First, a clarification: no reply is not the same as rejection. It usually means one of three things — your application wasn’t read, it was read but didn’t hold attention past the first sentence, or the job was already filled before your message arrived.
Employers on OnlineJobs.ph and Upwork receive dozens of applications for every posting. Many of those applications look similar — generic messages, no portfolio link, and claims about being “hardworking” that mean nothing without proof. Your message gets scanned for one second and either flagged for a closer look or moved past.
The good news is that this means your silence is almost never about you as a person. It’s about your message — and messages are changeable.
Before you change anything, answer this honestly: are the 20 jobs you applied to actually appropriate for your current skill level? Applying to senior social media manager roles with no portfolio, or data analyst roles with no Excel experience, produces silence not because your application is bad — but because the role is wrong. Skill mismatch is the most overlooked cause of mass silence.
Most cases of 20 applications with zero replies trace back to one of these six problems. Read through all of them and be honest about which one applies to you — or whether it’s a combination.
This single change — rewriting the application message — resolves the silence for the majority of Filipino beginners. Here’s what the difference looks like on a real VA role listing.
Good day sir/ma'am! I am Maria, 24 years old from Laguna. I am very interested in your job posting. I am hardworking, dedicated, and a fast learner. I have experience in Microsoft Office and I am willing to be trained. I will give 100% to this job. I hope you will give me a chance. Thank you and God bless!
I saw you're looking for a VA to handle email and scheduling. I've been using Google Workspace — Gmail, Calendar, and Drive — for organizing shared documents and coordinating schedules. I'm available during US Eastern morning hours. Here's a sample inbox system I built: [Google Drive link]. Happy to do a short test task if that helps. What would your onboarding process look like?
Scenario — 30 applications, no replies, one change fixed it
On Week 7, after reading this guide’s application section, she wrote a new message from scratch for a specific listing she found on OnlineJobs.ph. She looked at the job post for five minutes, noted that it mentioned scheduling and email management, and wrote a message that opened with exactly those two things — and linked to a Google Sheet she’d made the day before as a sample inbox system.
Scenario — good message, wrong platform, problem solved by adding one more
Nothing about his application changed. The platform was the variable.
1
Applying more instead of applying better
2
Taking the silence personally
3
Blaming the market instead of diagnosing the application
4
Not building a portfolio before applying
5
Not reading the job post carefully before applying

Pull up your last five application messages. Read them like an employer — not like yourself. Does the first sentence reference the specific job? Does it name actual tools? Is there a portfolio link? If the answer to any of these is no, fix that before sending the next batch. Don't increase volume until you've confirmed the quality.

Set up job alerts on OnlineJobs.ph for your target keywords. Check daily, first thing in the morning. Apply within 24 hours of each new posting. Being among the first applicants means the employer is still actively checking messages. Being the 50th applicant three weeks later means the position is almost certainly filled.

Open Google Drive. Create a folder called "Portfolio." Build one sample that shows what you can do: a formatted spreadsheet, a Canva post set, a sample email template, a short edited video clip. Share it as "anyone with the link can view." Put that link in every application you send from today forward. This change alone is responsible for more breakthrough replies than any other single adjustment.

If you've been on Upwork only, add OnlineJobs.ph. If you've been on OnlineJobs.ph only, add a Fiverr gig. Different platforms attract different buyers. OnlineJobs.ph is particularly beginner-accessible for Filipino applicants because the client base expects Filipino workers and many are open to training. The same portfolio and message can work across multiple platforms with minor adjustments.

Post your application message (with personal details removed) in a Filipino freelance Facebook group and ask for honest feedback. "Does this message make you want to hire me?" is a direct question that gets direct answers. You'll often find within minutes that something you thought was fine is the specific thing holding you back. External eyes see what we can't.

If you applied through Facebook groups rather than established platforms, some of those "jobs" may have been scams — designed to collect personal information or lead you to a fee-based scheme rather than actual employment. Silence from a scam poster is different from silence from a real employer. Only apply through verifiable platforms and verify employers independently. See our Scam Alerts page →
Twenty applications with zero replies is a pattern — and patterns have causes. The cause is almost always specific: a generic message, no portfolio, stale listings, wrong platform, or mismatched role level. Rarely is it the market, and never is it you as a person.
The fix is to diagnose before you reapply. Fix the one or two things that are most likely causing the silence, then send five better applications and observe what changes. Don’t send fifty more of the same thing hoping the outcome will be different.
2. Build or update your portfolio link — One sample in a Google Drive folder. Relevant to the role you’re targeting. Shareable by link. If you already have a portfolio link, check that it still works and the content is current. Add it to every application from now on. Read our portfolio guide → if you need to build one.