
See What's Earning in AI Automation Freelancing.
DigiNo helps new AI automation freelancers earn faster by tracking what clients actually pay for.
Most freelancers set up a Contra profile by guessing. They write the headline they think buyers want to hear, copy a pricing model from a YouTube video, and hope the algorithm finds them. The result is a profile that looks fine in isolation and disappears in a search.
The fix is to look at what the highest earners on Contra are actually doing, then borrow the structural decisions that put them there. I pulled apart three profiles: a $1M+ earner, a $250k+ earner, and a $100k+ earner. Three different niches. Three different pricing models. One consistent pattern of how they win.
Here is what they sell, what they charge, and the seven things they have in common.
The $1M Earner: Mark Vassilevskiy (Skale Solutions)
Mark runs a design agency called Skale Solutions out of the San Francisco Bay Area, originally founded from Kazakhstan when he was a teenager. His Contra profile shows $1M+ earned across 53 contracts, a perfect 5.00 rating, and the “Top Independent” badge.
His headline: “Premium Launch Videos for Startups.”
That headline is the entire strategy in one sentence. Not “video editor”. Not “motion designer”. Premium launch videos, one customer type, startups. Niche compression this tight is the first rule of the top end on Contra.
His services list has exactly two entries:
- 3D Launch Videos. $20,000 per month. Monthly retainer.
- Full Launch Video Campaign. $40,000. Fixed price.
That is it. No hourly rate published. No starter package. No $500 quick-fix offer. The lowest commitment a client can make is $20k a month, and the highest is a single $40k engagement that almost certainly leads into a retainer anyway.
Portfolio: 12+ projects, every one visually polished. The client list reads like a Silicon Valley roster: ClickUp, Bolt.new, Helpscout, Wonder, multiple Y Combinator backed startups. Each portfolio piece is itself a marketing asset because the work is video, so the portfolio doubles as a showreel.
External links: 4 platforms (Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Medium, Instagram). Modest by top-end standards. The Twitter following is where most of the inbound originates.
He has no “Quick Responder” badge. He has “Top Independent” and “Jitter Expert” instead.
The $250k Earner: Mario Busto (1992 Films)
Mario is a video editor based in Miami. His Contra profile shows $250k+ earned and a 5.00 rating. The badges visible are “Top Independent” and “YC Hired”.
His headline: “Expert Video Editing and Cinematic Storytelling.”
Slightly less niched than Mark, but still pinned to a specific craft. Video editor. Not content creator. Not generalist.
His services list has three entries, and this is where it gets interesting:
- Post-Production Video Editing. $70 per hour. Hourly.
- Video Content Creation. Contact for pricing.
- Creative Consultation. $100 per hour. Hourly.
Mario sells two of his three services hourly. At $250k+ earned, he is the counterexample to “everyone at the top uses fixed price”. He has built a steady inbound flow at rates between $70 and $100 per hour, with one custom-quoted service for larger campaigns.
Portfolio: 70+ projects. Massive volume. PUMA, Wilson Tennis, multiple YC-backed startups, music campaigns, product launches. The portfolio reads less like a curated case-study set and more like a working showreel. Lots of evidence that he can edit anything from sports doc to product launch.
External links: 5 platforms (YouTube channel, Instagram, X, personal site at 1992films.com, LinkedIn). His YouTube channel is itself proof of the craft.
No retainer service listed. No Quick Responder badge.
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Start a Contra Profile Free →The $100k Earner: Jeremie Lasnier
Jeremie is a brand and product designer in Miami. His Contra profile shows $100k+ earned, 5.00 rating, “Framer Expert” badge.
His headline: “Branding, Product & Web Design that convert.”
Three disciplines bundled together, all aimed at conversion. The word “convert” is doing real work. It signals to buyers that he positions design as a revenue lever, not decoration. That positioning attracts a specific kind of client.
His services list has five entries, and this is where the $100k pattern shows up cleanly:
- Website Design and Development (Framer or Webflow). $5,000. Fixed price.
- Brand Identity. $5,000. Fixed price.
- Design Partner Monthly Retainer. $5,000 per month.
- Mobile and Web App Design (UX/UI). $8,000. Fixed price.
- SaaS and AI Product Design. $8,000. Fixed price.
Five services. Four fixed-price, one retainer. The retainer is priced at the same level as his cheapest one-off project, which is smart positioning. It tells the client “lock in the standalone project rate, get monthly support”. That is a strong nudge from project to retainer.
Portfolio: 15 projects. Brand builds, websites, product UX, pitch decks. Custom cover images on every case. The visual quality on the portfolio is what tells a $5k buyer that the price is fair.
External links: 6 platforms (personal site at prohodos.com, LinkedIn, X, Instagram, Behance, Dribbble). The most external presence of the three profiles. Designers tend to be on more platforms than other freelancers, and Jeremie reflects that.
No Quick Responder badge.
The Patterns That Repeat
Across all three profiles, the same structural choices appear.
Niche compression. None of them sell “design” or “video” or “creative services”. Each pins to a specific customer type or output. The closer to the top of the income ladder, the tighter the niche.
A perfect 5.00 rating. Not 4.9, not 4.95. Five flat. The top of Contra is winner-take-most based on flawless reputation, not volume of reviews.
Lots of external links. Four to six platforms each. A buyer is meant to verify the freelancer outside Contra before sending payment. The external links are the verification surface.
Portfolio that doubles as marketing. Mark's portfolio is also his showreel. Mario's 70+ projects are his sales pitch. Jeremie's case studies have custom cover images that read as visual statements in their own right. Top earners do not screenshot Figma boards and call it done.
A retainer somewhere in the service list, or service prices high enough that no retainer is needed. Mark has the $20k per month retainer. Jeremie has the $5k per month retainer. Mario does not, but his hourly rate and volume make up for it.
Fixed-price services dominate above $100k earned. Jeremie is 80% fixed-price. Mark is 100% fixed-price or retainer. Mario is the exception at hourly, and Mario also caps lower in earnings than the other two.
A specialist badge that names a tool, not a generic “Top Rated”. Jitter Expert for Mark. Framer Expert for Jeremie. The badges signal that the freelancer is on the platform a specific tool's vendor recommends. That is a strong third-party trust signal.
What Is Surprisingly Absent
The Quick Responder badge. Several Contra setup guides treat this as a make-or-break signal. None of the three top earners have it. The badge that actually matters at the top is “Top Independent”, earned through earnings and review quality, not response time.
Hundreds of reviews. Mark hit $1M+ across 53 contracts. That is a lot of money per engagement, not a lot of engagements. The top end of Contra is won by raising the price per project, not by stacking dozens of small jobs.
Hourly pricing at $1M+. Mark publishes zero hourly rates. The $1M tier is fixed-price and retainer only.
AI automation freelancers. None of the three top earners are in AI automation. The dominant top-earner niches on Contra are design (brand, product, web), video (launch videos, editing, motion), and consulting around those crafts. Looking at the Contra freelancer demand data DigiNo tracks, the top five n8n specialists between them show only 89 combined verified reviews. The top five Claude specialists show 172. These are emerging niches, not yet saturated at the top. The direct implication for an automation freelancer is this: the top of the AI automation category on Contra is still open, and the playbook to claim it is already documented by what design and video freelancers have done.
A massive review count. The top end runs lean on review volume because each contract is so much larger. You do not need three hundred reviews to break through. You need enough reviews to clear the trust gap, and then you raise the price.
What You Can Copy Right Now
Whatever your niche, the following are portable.
Write a headline that names one outcome and one customer type. “Premium launch videos for startups” is a template you can copy. Replace “premium launch videos” with your specific deliverable and “startups” with your specific buyer. Generic headlines lose to specific ones every time.
Cap your service list at three to five entries. Mark has two. Jeremie has five. Long lists signal indecision.
Include one retainer service. Even if it stays inactive for months. Buyers who want ongoing work scan for it. Without it, you are filtered out before the first message.
Lead with fixed price for productized services. Reserve hourly only for consulting or open-scope work. The shift from hourly to fixed is one of the larger leverage moves on the platform.
Stack at least four external links. Personal site, LinkedIn, one social channel, and at least one craft-specific platform. Behance for designers, GitHub for developers, YouTube for video, an open-source repo or live demo for builders. The buyer should be able to verify you from three angles outside Contra.
Make every portfolio piece visually consistent. Custom cover image. Specific result in the headline of the case. Numbers in the body. Mark's video portfolio doubles as a showreel. Yours should double as the strongest single piece of marketing you ship.
Decide which badge you want to earn next and chase the exact behavior that triggers it. For most freelancers that is not Quick Responder. It is a tool-specific expert badge that signals specialism to the buyer.
The Order to Implement It
The fastest path to copying the top earners is to rewrite three things this week.
The headline, to name one outcome and one buyer type.
The service list, to cut to three entries with at least one retainer.
The portfolio cover images, to make every case look intentional from the thumbnail.
Then add the missing external links until you have four to six.
Most freelancers who do this in a single afternoon move their profile from “filled in” to “actually competitive” without writing a single new word of bio copy.
If you have not built a Contra profile yet, you can start one for free here. The platform takes no commission, payments route through Stripe, and the setup is the same regardless of which tier you are aiming for. The structural choices above scale from a $5k month to a $100k month. The earners I studied are proof.
Build a Contra Profile That Competes
Commission-free, Stripe-powered, the same platform every freelancer in this analysis is using. Set up your profile, claim your tool tags, and copy what the top earners are already doing.
Start a Contra Profile Free →
See What's Earning in AI Automation Freelancing.
DigiNo helps new AI automation freelancers earn faster by tracking what clients actually pay for.

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