— Platform Guide

OnlineJobs.ph Review: How to Set Up a Profile That Gets Noticed

Most Filipino beginners sign up, fill in the basics, and then wonder why no one messages them. Here’s what’s actually going wrong — and how to fix it.

Last updated: May 2026

    Beginner-friendly

    Platform: OnlineJobs.ph

In this Guide

Not yet a VA? Read the full VA beginner guide → before checking pay ranges.

Quick pay reference

₱15K–₱28K

Entry FT / month

₱30K–₱55K

Mid-level FT / month

₱60K–₱120K+

Senior FT / month

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OnlineJobs.ph is one of the most popular platforms for Filipinos looking for remote work — but signing up and having a good profile are two different things. A lot of beginners create an account, upload a photo, write two sentences about themselves, and wait. Nothing happens. Then they assume the platform doesn’t work. The platform works. The profile doesn’t.

What OnlineJobs.ph is — and why it matters for Filipinos

OnlineJobs.ph is a job board specifically designed to connect Filipino workers with international employers — mostly from the US, Australia, Canada, and the UK. It was built by John Jonas, an American entrepreneur who has hired Filipino virtual assistants for over a decade.

Unlike platforms such as Upwork or Fiverr, you don’t bid on projects here. Employers post job listings, browse worker profiles, and send messages directly. That means your profile does a lot of the heavy lifting. If it’s weak, you simply won’t get found.

The platform has a free tier for workers, which lets you apply to job posts. There’s also a paid “Full Access” option that unlocks unlimited applications and makes your profile more visible in employer searches. We’ll cover whether that’s worth it later in this guide.

Why this platform specifically

OnlineJobs.ph is one of the few platforms where Filipino workers are the main audience — not competing with workers from every country. That levels the playing field significantly for beginners. Employers here also tend to be more patient with new hires and more open to training.

The jobs listed span a wide range — virtual assistants, data entry, customer support, social media management, bookkeeping, writing, graphic design, and more. If you’re new to remote work, it’s often the best first stop. Virtual Assistant

Setting up your profile: step by step

Here’s what the profile setup process looks like and what actually matters in each section. Don’t rush through this. Employers look at profiles before they look at your application message.

1

Upload a clear, professional photo

This doesn’t need to be a studio shot. A good phone photo in decent lighting, with a plain background, is enough. Face forward, smile, look approachable. Avoid selfies taken from weird angles, heavy filters, or group photos where you’ve cropped yourself out. Employers are looking for someone they feel comfortable trusting with their business — your photo creates a first impression before they read a single word.

2

Write a headline that describes what you actually do

The headline field appears under your name in search results. Don’t write “Looking for online job” or “Fresh graduate seeking opportunity.” That tells an employer nothing. Instead, write what you offer: “Virtual Assistant | Email Management | Calendar Scheduling | Data Entry” or “Social Media Manager | Canva Graphics | Content Planning.” Think of it like a billboard — you have one line to tell someone what you do.

3

Write a bio that speaks to the employer, not about yourself

This is where most beginners go wrong. They write a paragraph about their personal background — where they grew up, what they studied, why they want to work online. The employer doesn’t need your life story. They need to know what problem you can solve for them. Start by describing who you help, what tasks you handle, and how you work. Keep it under 150 words. Write in plain, confident English. No need for complicated vocabulary — clear is better.

4

Fill in your skills accurately — and specifically

The skills section is indexed. Employers use it to filter profiles. Don’t add ten vague skills like “communication” and “hard-working.” Add specific, tool-based skills: Google Workspace, Trello, Slack, Canva, WordPress, QuickBooks, Shopify. If you’ve used it, list it. If you haven’t, don’t. Employers will ask about your tools in their first message and will know quickly if you listed something you can’t actually use.

5

Set your rate — and don’t underprice yourself into invisibility

OnlineJobs.ph lets you set an hourly rate or monthly rate. Beginners often set their rates extremely low hoping it makes them more attractive. It can actually do the opposite. A rate that’s too low can signal to employers that something is wrong. For beginners with no experience, ₱200–₱350/hour (roughly $3.50–$6 USD) is a reasonable starting range for general VA work. Data Entry for role-specific rate guidance.

6

Add your work experience — even if it’s not online work

Have you done admin work at a previous job? Handled scheduling or coordination? Managed a social media page for a local business — even for free? Include it. Employers understand that many Filipino applicants are transitioning from traditional employment. What they want to see is that you have some track record of responsibility. Describe each experience briefly: what you did, what tools you used, and what result you achieved.

7

Attach a portfolio link or sample work

OnlineJobs.ph lets you add links and attachments to your profile. If you have a Google Drive folder with sample work, link it. If you built anything — a spreadsheet template, a Canva design, a sample social media calendar — attach it. Even one solid sample raises your credibility more than any amount of description. If you don’t have samples yet, read our guide on building a VA portfolio with no clients →

What a good profile actually looks like

Here are two examples — one weak, one strong — based on real profile patterns we’ve seen from Filipino beginners.

The profile that gets ignored

Weak profile example

Headline: “Hardworking, dedicated, looking for online job”
Bio: “Hi! I am Maria, 24 years old from Cebu City. I recently graduated with a degree in Business Administration. I am a fast learner and I am willing to be trained. I am looking for an opportunity to grow my career in the online world. I am hardworking, honest, and responsible. I hope to hear from you soon.”
Skills listed: Communication, Teamwork, Microsoft Office, Fast Learner, Dedicated

Nothing in that profile tells an employer what specific tasks Maria can do, what tools she knows, or how she’d help their business. Every word is about her, not about them.

The profile that gets messages

Strong profile example

Headline: “Virtual Assistant | Email & Calendar Management | Google Workspace | Trello | Canva”
Bio:“I help small business owners stay organized by managing their email inbox, scheduling appointments, and handling day-to-day admin tasks. I’m comfortable with Google Workspace, Trello, Canva, and Slack. I respond quickly, work independently without needing constant check-ins, and I’m reliable with deadlines. Available 20–40 hours per week, Philippine time (overlap with US mornings possible).”
Skills listed: Google Workspace, Gmail, Google Calendar, Trello, Slack, Canva, Data Entry, Email Management, Scheduling, Basic Bookkeeping
Portfolio: [Google Drive link with 2 sample email templates and a Trello board screenshot]

The second profile is specific, employer-focused, and shows rather than tells. That’s the difference between getting messages and waiting in silence.

Common mistakes beginners make on OnlineJobs.ph

These aren’t rare — they’re patterns that appear in the majority of beginner profiles. If you recognize yourself in any of these, that’s the thing to fix first.

Writing a bio that sounds like a job application letter

Long paragraphs about being a “fast learner” and “willing to be trained” don’t tell employers anything useful. Employers want to know what you can do right now. Replace adjectives about your personality with descriptions of your actual tasks and tools.

Setting the rate to zero or leaving it blank

Some workers leave the rate field blank hoping employers will just name a price. This makes your profile feel incomplete. Put in a real number. You can always negotiate — but an empty rate field makes it look like you haven’t thought it through.

Using a photo that belongs on a Facebook timeline

Party photos, couple shots, heavy filters, and low-light selfies are common on beginner profiles. Your profile photo is your first impression to a foreign employer. Take five minutes to get a clean, clear headshot in natural light. It makes a bigger difference than most people realize.

Applying to every single job listing

OnlineJobs.ph’s free tier limits applications, so some people use those applications carelessly — mass applying to everything. Read each job post carefully and only apply to roles that actually match your skills. A targeted message to five relevant jobs will outperform a generic message to fifty jobs every time.

Ignoring scam job posts

OnlineJobs.ph does have a screening process, but scam listings still appear occasionally. Watch for posts that ask you to pay a registration or training fee, send money to “reserve” your slot, or move conversations immediately to Telegram or WhatsApp. No legitimate employer on OnlineJobs.ph will ask you for money. See our full Scam Alerts page →  for what to look for.

Practical tips to improve your profile this week

Search for your own profile as an employer would

Log out and search for the role you're targeting. See what profiles come up. Notice what the stronger ones have that yours doesn't. Then update accordingly.

Rewrite your bio in 100 words or less

Shorter bios are often read more carefully than long ones. Cut every sentence that doesn't answer this question: "What can you do for me?" If a sentence is about your feelings or desires, cut it.

List tools, not traits

Replace "hardworking," "dedicated," and "detail-oriented" with the names of software you've used. Google Sheets, Canva, Asana, Notion, HubSpot — these mean something to employers. Generic traits don't.

Create one sample and link it today

Don't wait until you have five pieces of portfolio work. Build one good sample — a scheduling template, a formatted document, a simple Canva graphic — put it in Google Drive and add the link to your profile today.

Mention your availability and timezone overlap

Many employers are in the US. Mentioning that you can overlap with US mornings or are available in the evenings (Philippine time) removes a common hesitation. Don't make them guess when you're available.

Consider upgrading to Full Access after your profile is solid

The paid plan on OnlineJobs.ph makes your profile more searchable and removes application limits. But upgrade only after your profile is actually good — paying for visibility on a weak profile won't help.

OnlineJobs.ph vs. other platforms — how it compares

This isn’t a ranking. Each platform has a different purpose. The goal is to help you understand where OnlineJobs.ph fits — and whether it’s the right starting point for you.

PlatformCompetitionFee on EarningsApplication StyleBest For
OnlineJobs.phFilipino workers onlyNone (free for workers)Apply to posts / be foundLong-term, part-time or full-time remote roles
UpworkGlobal (very high)Up to 20% on earningsBid on projectsProject-based work; higher rates once established
FiverrGlobal (very high)20% on all ordersClients find you via gigsOne-time tasks; creative work; digital products
Facebook GroupsVaries by groupNonePost or reply to listingsInformal, quick hires; more scam risk
For beginners specifically

OnlineJobs.ph is the most beginner-accessible platform for Filipinos who want their first long-term client. Upwork and Fiverr are harder to break into without reviews or a strong portfolio. Start here, build your first client relationship, then consider expanding to other platforms once you have experience to show.

What to do next

Setting up an OnlineJobs.ph profile properly isn’t complicated — but it does require you to think from the employer’s point of view. They’re not looking for the most enthusiastic applicant. They’re looking for someone who can do a specific job reliably.

If you haven’t created your account yet, start there. If you already have a profile, go back and review it with fresh eyes using the steps in this guide. Fix the photo, rewrite the bio, update the skills list, and add at least one portfolio link.

The profile that gets ignored

1. Rewrite your headline — replace vague phrases with specific skills and tools.

2. Rewrite your bio — cut everything that’s about you and focus on what you can do for an employer. Keep it under 150 words.

3. Add one portfolio sample — even a Google Drive folder with a single sample is better than nothing. Need help with this? Read our full guide on building a portfolio with no clients →

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