— Applications Guide
The reason most applications get ignored isn’t the applicant’s skills — it’s the message they send. Here’s what’s going wrong and exactly how to fix it.
Last updated: May 2026
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Every sentence in your application should answer: “What does this employer get if they hire me?” If it doesn’t answer that question, cut it.
You spent time building your profile. You found a job posting that fits. You wrote what felt like a decent message — something honest, something polite. And then nothing. No reply. You applied to ten more and still nothing. At some point it starts to feel personal, like there’s something wrong with you or your experience level. Most of the time, that’s not the problem. The problem is the message itself — not because you’re a bad writer, but because no one showed you what a good one actually looks like.
Employers posting on OnlineJobs.ph, Upwork, or Fiverr receive dozens of applications for a single role. They skim. They’re looking for one signal in the first two sentences: does this person understand what I actually need?
Most Filipino beginners write applications that answer a different question entirely — “Who am I and why do I want this job?” That’s the wrong question. The employer already knows why you want the job. What they don’t know yet is whether you can do it.
An application that leads with your name, your age, your hometown, and your willingness to be trained tells the employer nothing about their problem. It tells them about yours. That’s the core disconnect — and it’s fixable in one rewrite.
Stop writing about yourself. Start writing about what you can do for them. Every sentence in your application should answer: "What does this employer get if they hire me?" Not "What do I get if they hire me?" That shift sounds small. The difference in reply rate is not small.
A strong online job application has four parts. Not four paragraphs — four jobs that each sentence needs to do. Here’s what they are and why each matters.
Four parts. Kept short. Focused entirely on the employer’s needs. That’s the structure. Now let’s look at what it looks like in practice — versus what most beginners actually send.
Job post: “Looking for a VA to manage my email, schedule meetings, and do light research. US-based business, must be available mornings Manila time.”
Good day! I am Maricel, 24 years old from Laguna. I am a fresh graduate with a degree in Business Administration. I am very hardworking, dedicated, and a fast learner. I am willing to be trained and I will give 100% to this job. I hope you will give me a chance to prove myself. I am available anytime. Thank you and God bless!
I saw you're looking for a VA to handle email and scheduling for a US business. I've been managing a Gmail inbox using labels and filters and am familiar with Google Calendar for scheduling across time zones. I'm available from 7am–12pm Manila time, which overlaps with your US mornings.
Here's a short sample I put together showing how I'd organize an inbox: [Google Drive link]. Happy to do a short test task if that's helpful.
Buyer request: “Need someone to enter 500 product records into a Google Sheet from a PDF. Clean formatting, no errors.”
Hello sir/ma'am! I am interested in your project. I am good at typing and data entry. I have experience with computers and Microsoft Office. I am very detail-oriented and accurate. I can start immediately. Please consider me for this project. Thank you!
I can handle this. I've done similar PDF-to-Sheets transfers — 500 rows is about 2–3 hours of focused work at my current speed (52 WPM, accuracy rate above 99%).
I'll set up consistent column headers, check for duplicates, and flag any records where the PDF data is unclear rather than guess. Delivery in 24 hours. Want to share the PDF so I can confirm the format before we start?
Post: “Looking for someone to manage our Instagram and Facebook pages. Small food business. Budget is ₱3,000–₱5,000/month.”
Hi po! I am interested. I am active on social media and I love creating content. I am a college student with free time. I can make posts for you and I am creative and passionate. Please DM me. Thank you po!
Hi! I manage social media for two small businesses (a clothing brand and a skincare page) — mostly Canva graphics, caption writing, and scheduling through Meta Business Suite. Food content is something I enjoy and have done sample work for.
Here are three sample posts I made for a mock food brand: [link]. Within your budget, I can handle 12 posts/month with captions and basic hashtag research. Open to a trial week if you'd like to see how it fits.
The core principle is the same everywhere — be specific, be relevant, show proof. But the format and length adjust depending on where you’re applying.

Employers here read carefully because they’re hiring for longer-term roles. You can write slightly more. But “slightly more” means 150 words — not a five-paragraph cover letter. Use a clear subject line if sending by email: “VA Application — Email & Calendar Management.” Start with the specific role, name your relevant skills with brief proof, and end with a portfolio link or sample. See our OnlineJobs.ph profile guide →

Buyers on Fiverr scan fast. Your first sentence has to earn the second. Skip any greeting beyond “Hi” — and even that is optional. Get to the point: what you’ll deliver, how long it takes, and why you’re the right choice. End with one smart question about their project. Don’t copy-paste the same offer to every request. Fiverr buyers receive dozens of identical messages; a single specific detail makes yours stand out.

Upwork proposals have a dedicated field. Open with what the job post actually said — Upwork’s own data shows proposals that reference the client’s specific words get more replies. Then your relevant skill or experience. Then your rate and timeline. Close with one question that shows you’ve thought about their project, not just the category it falls into. Avoid the Upwork “cover letter template” that thousands of other applicants also use.

For Facebook job posts, comment briefly (“Hi! I have experience with [specific skill] — sending you a DM with more details”) then send a short, direct message with your relevant experience and a portfolio link. Don’t put your entire application in a comment. Long comment applications look desperate and are hard to read. The comment gets attention; the DM closes the conversation. Always be on guard for scam job posts in these groups.
1
Sending the exact same message to every job
2
Using words that every other applicant uses
3
Writing the application in Taglish or informal English
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Starting with “I am [name], [age] years old from [city]”
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No portfolio link, no sample — nothing to look at
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Ending with “I hope to hear from you soon” and nothing else

Most applicants skim the post and start typing immediately. Read it twice. Underline the specific tools, skills, or requirements mentioned. Your application should address at least two of them directly. If your message could be sent to a different job post without changing a word, rewrite it.

Numbers are specific and memorable. "I can enter around 200 rows per hour with less than 1% error" is far more compelling than "I am accurate and fast." Think about your work in measurable terms: WPM, hours of availability, number of posts per month, turnaround time in hours. Employers read numbers differently than adjectives — they feel like facts.

Write your application, then go through it and remove every sentence that doesn't directly answer "what can you do for this employer?" You'll usually find you can cut 40–50% without losing anything important. Shorter, focused messages get better responses than longer, thorough ones. Employers are busy. Don't make them work to find your point.

Once you write a strong application for a VA role, save it. Use it as a starting template — not to copy-paste, but to reference the structure and tone. Build one strong base for each job type you apply to: VA, data entry, design, writing. Then customize from that base for each specific post. This saves time without sacrificing relevance.

This sounds strange but it works. If you stumble while reading it out loud, the employer will stumble reading it silently. If it sounds stiff, robotic, or over-formal, rewrite those sentences. Your application should sound like a confident, professional person talking about their work — not like a formal letter to a government agency.

Employers on OnlineJobs.ph and Upwork often review applications in batches. Being in the first ten to twenty applications gives you a real advantage — your message gets read before they're fatigued from reading thirty others. Set up job alerts on OnlineJobs.ph for your keywords and check daily. Fast applications with good messages consistently outperform slow applications with great ones.
Your application is often the only thing standing between you and a reply. A strong profile, a good skill set, and competitive rates mean nothing if the message that represents them fails to connect. The good news is that most applicants send weak messages — which means a well-written one stands out more than you might expect.
You don’t need to be a great writer to write a great application. You need to be specific, relevant, and focused on the employer’s problem. That’s a discipline, not a talent.
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