Industry News

The Great Resignation Means More Freelancers

Last year, over 47 million Americans voluntarily quit their jobs in a mass exit from the workforce that is now widely known as the Great Resignation. According to a new global survey by PwC, one in five say they are likely to switch jobs in the next 12 months. While a record-breaking number of workers are quitting their jobs, it’s important to take a look at the reasons WHY they’re leaving. The Great Resignation is more of a reprioritization. After the past two years, more people are taking a hard look at what they want out of a job and a career. The need for flexibility and a better work-life balance is driving people away from full-time and towards a freelance career path.

Workers Want Flexibility

Just how much could the freelance population grow as a result of The Great Resignation? According to recent data, 10 million Americans are projected to be seriously considering the move to freelance. Of those workers who are already planning on quitting their full-time jobs, 52% are considering the move to freelancing. These workers want flexibility and the ability to work remotely. In fact, 24%, in a recent UpWork survey, 73% of those workers planning to more to freelance cite the ability to work remote or flexibly as the top reason why.

What Does This Mean For Companies?

Businesses need to get ready for this shift and stop treating freelancers like an afterthought. In the future, most workplaces will be a mix of full-time, hybrid, and freelancers. With almost 11 million current job openings in the U.S., hiring freelancers can help businesses fill the skills gaps.

While workers understand the benefits that come from a freelance lifestyle, there can be benefits to businesses as well. The same flexibility that people crave in their work-life is the same flexibility that can benefit managers. By assigning projects to freelancers with specific skillsets and using them only when and where they are needed, you’re creating a much more efficient workstream. 

By hiring more freelancers, managers can access top skilled workers with specific expertise and see a faster turnaround on important projects. Cost savings can come from only paying for work when and where it is needed to help businesses scale even faster.

While the Great Resignation has transformed expectations in traditional workplaces and led to a boom of freelancers, this can lead to a great opportunity for employers to embrace contractors, consultants, and other types of flexible work arrangements.

Planning to work with more freelancers this year? AllWork can help you onboard, manage, and pay your flexible workforce. We offer fast, easy, and compliant payment options. Get in touch at info@allworknow.com to learn more and see a demo of our platform here.

Laura Dutile

Director of Marketing at AllWork

Recent Posts

The Systems Powering Today’s Extended Workforce

Workforce technology is changing faster than workforce structures. In a recent webinar, David Francis, Global…

8 hours ago

How Data and Technology Are Reshaping Contingent Workforce Management

As part of a recent Staffing Industry Analysts (SIA) webinar, AllWork CEO Glenn Laumeister joined…

6 days ago

Inside CEW’s ‘State of the Industry’: What’s Next for Beauty, Retail, and the Workforce

At Cosmetic Executive Women’s (CEW) recent State of the Industry: Global Trend Report 2025 webinar,…

1 week ago

You Hired Them—Now What? Managing Onboarding in a Flexible Workforce

Onboarding is one of the most overlooked—and riskiest—stages in managing a flexible workforce. Even small…

3 weeks ago

How Summer Fridays Scales a Flexible Field Team with AllWork

About Summer Fridays Summer Fridays is a growing clean beauty brand focused on simple, effective…

3 weeks ago

The Invisible Effect of Friction in Flexible Work

Business moves fast. And "flexibility" isn’t a buzzword—it’s more so how work just gets done…

2 months ago