Fiverr takes 20% of every order and commoditises music services through price competition. Virgoul positions musicians professionally with verified profiles, community reputation, and no per-transaction fee.
Fiverr is one of the most widely used freelance marketplaces globally, with a large category for music and audio services including session recording, mixing, mastering, beat production, and vocal performance. Musicians use Fiverr to offer services starting at $5 — hence the platform's name — though experienced producers and session players can charge significantly more for premium packages.
Fiverr charges 20 percent of every completed order, regardless of order size. A producer selling a beat package for $200 gives $40 to Fiverr. Over a year of moderate freelance volume — 10 orders per month at $150 average — a musician pays Fiverr $3,600 in platform fees. The commoditisation effect is Fiverr's more significant long-term problem: because the platform is built around price competition, music services are displayed alongside thousands of competitors, and buyers frequently choose based on price rather than quality. This creates downward pressure on rates across the entire category.
Virgoul approaches music services differently. Rather than a freelance job board, Virgoul is a professional musician network where session work and collaboration opportunities exist within a community context. A musician's Virgoul profile includes their performance history, community reputation, verified status, and connections — giving bookers a richer picture than a Fiverr gig listing. The gig marketplace on Virgoul surfaces curated music-specific opportunities rather than race-to-the-bottom price comparison.
For musicians who need immediate freelance income and are starting with no audience, Fiverr provides accessible entry. For musicians building a sustainable professional reputation, Virgoul's community model creates longer-term value.
Virgoul positions session musicians and producers professionally — verified profiles, community reputation, and a gig marketplace built for music careers, not price wars. Join at virgoul.com.
Join VirgoulYes, particularly for high-volume services like mixing, mastering, and beat production. The 20% fee and price competition are significant costs, but Fiverr's traffic means consistent order flow for well-optimised listings.
Yes. Virgoul's gig marketplace includes opportunities for session recording, collaboration, live performance, and production work within the platform's verified musician network.
Fiverr provides faster first orders for producers with no existing audience because of its built-in traffic. Virgoul builds longer-term professional reputation but requires more time to generate consistent inbound inquiries.