Mid-sized companies face increasing pressure to fill specialized IT roles as the talent shortage slows down projects. With fluctuating needs and tight deadlines, many organizations turn to freelance marketplaces such as Upwork or Malt to gain rapid access to a global pool and competitive rates.
This approach is attractive for its administrative flexibility and variable costs, but it also raises serious concerns about deliverable reliability, continuity, and security. In the long run, hiring isolated profiles can create more risks than benefits if no governance framework is established.
Limitations and Risks of Freelance Marketplaces
Freelance marketplaces provide instant access to IT skills, but they conceal major warning signs. These risks materialize as delays, cost overruns, and disputes that are hard to resolve.
Identifying these pitfalls early is essential to prevent your projects from bogging down.
Off-platform Communication and Payments
A first red flag appears when a freelancer suggests moving discussions and payments off the marketplace. By doing so, you lose escrow protection and dispute mediation. The freelancer becomes hard to trace, and you have no guarantee of work quality.
Without an intermediary, any disagreement over scope or deadlines can end abruptly with the engagement terminated and no recourse. In the worst case, you must restart recruitment and reassign internal resources, impacting your go-live dates.
Example: A Swiss logistics service provider saw an API integration project stall for two months after a developer insisted on direct payment. This overlap with other initiatives led to a 15% budget overrun.
Scope Creep and Free Deliverable Expectations
Job descriptions can be deliberately vague to attract proposals, then the freelancer gradually expands the scope. Requests for free tests or prototypes are often presented as a “proof of concept” before approval, but they have real consequences.
These practices lead to scope drift: each new feature is billed extra, and timelines stretch without clear milestones. You can apply a software testing strategy to maintain visibility and control costs.
Example: An energy sector player spent four weeks on an undocumented prototype meant to validate a new widget. At the end of testing, they had to rewrite the code and overhaul the architecture because the deliverable met none of their internal standards.
Poor-Quality Code and Uncontrolled AI
A very low hourly rate often hides fragile code or work generated by AI without proper oversight. Without a rigorous review, that code may contain security vulnerabilities, duplications, and inconsistent conventions, complicating future maintenance.
A lack of unit and integration tests results in an accumulation of bugs in production. Fixing these issues then forces your own teams to “rescue” the project, further inflating your internal costs.
Example: An SME in market finance had to dedicate three in-house developers for two months to redo a low-cost freelancer’s reporting module. The absence of test coverage and minimal documentation brought the deployment pipeline to a standstill.
Lack of Transparency and Unreliable History
On some platforms, a profile may look experienced without enough reviews or verification badges. Without reliable history, you can’t gauge true competence or the ability to follow formal processes.
When these freelancers handle critical tasks (database management, network security), the lack of certification or technical audit greatly increases operational risk. A single vulnerability can lead to data breaches or major incidents.
Example: A public agency hired a freelance consultant for a data migration project. The lack of traceability and controls caused the loss of 20,000 records, triggering a GDPR investigation and a liability dispute with the provider.
Governance, Security, and Quality Challenges
Public marketplaces rarely guarantee compliance, data protection, or legal liability. These gaps jeopardize the safety of your systems and intellectual property.
Implementing verification and control mechanisms is indispensable but often absent or ineffective with freelancers.
Compliance and Confidentiality (GDPR)
Freelancers are not always trained in GDPR requirements and may handle personal data without adequate safeguards. The absence of a Data Processing Agreement or activity log is a major flaw.
In an audit, your organization remains liable for breaches and may face substantial fines. You must systematically verify the existence of a Data Processing Agreement and strict pseudonymization practices.
Example: A Swiss provider in the medical-social sector had to halt a project for two months after discovering its freelance partner was storing patient data on an unsecured personal server, exposing the organization to administrative sanctions.
Access Security and Intellectual Property
Granting direct access to source code or production environments without centralized governance creates organizational gaps. A freelancer may keep local copies of code or confidential assets without your oversight.
In case of a dispute or sudden departure, retrieving all deliverables and revoking access becomes a major challenge. Your contractual liability is at risk, while the freelancer can hide behind marketplace limitations.
Example: A Swiss fintech faced a dispute with a developer who refused to return code after full payment. Without a solid NDA clause, the startup had to undertake lengthy legal procedures to reclaim its software rights.
Quality Guarantees and Review Processes
Marketplaces sometimes claim generic certifications (ISO 9001, ISO 27001) for their platform, but not for individual freelancers. Code reviews, security, and automated tests are not enforced by the system.
You need a significant internal effort to compensate for this lack of control: form a technical committee, define formal acceptance processes, and schedule frequent review meetings. This management overhead reduces the attractiveness of the freelance model.
Example: An industrial company introduced a weekly code review cycle to offset the lack of QA from freelancers. In practice, this consumed three internal days per sprint, detracting from new feature development.
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Overview of IT Engagement Models
Several approaches exist to bolster your tech teams, each with its own level of control, costs, and risks. Choosing the right collaboration framework determines your project’s success.
Objectively comparing freelancers, staff augmentation, outsourcing, and offshore centers helps secure your resources and anticipate necessary management effort.
Freelance per Engagement
This model offers high budgetary and administrative flexibility with no long-term commitment. You pay by the hour or project and quickly adjust effort as needed.
However, governance responsibility is entirely internal: scope definition, acceptance processes, and quality tracking rest on your teams.
Turnover is high, and continuity depends on the freelancer’s availability. You have no guarantees of consistent engagement or backup in case of absence.
Example: A healthcare sector player hired several independents for its mobile app. Each worked at their own pace, causing frequent rollbacks to align deliverables and resulting in an overall six-week delay.
Traditional Staff Augmentation
This model integrates external resources into your teams, often via long-term contracts. You retain control of management and the internal Agile process. Staff augmentation solves many scaling challenges.
Skill ramp-up and cultural alignment require substantial onboarding investment. Providers rarely offer additional oversight.
In case of turnover, continuity is tested and internal mobility can create capacity gaps. Profiles may struggle if your methods or tools differ significantly.
Example: An industrial SME added three external developers for an IoT project. Two were unfamiliar with internal processes, forcing the IT team to spend 40% of its time on coordination.
Project Outsourcing and Offshore Centers
Outsourcing a fixed-price project to an offshore provider delivers clear scope definition and often competitive overall cost. This model is detailed in our software outsourcing guide.
This approach can suffer from a lack of real-time visibility and weak business alignment if governance isn’t structured. Language and cultural barriers may also hinder communication.
Dependence on a single provider increases risks of collective turnover and mid-contract rate revisions. You must establish a solid contractual framework to mitigate these effects.
Example: A European retailer outsourced its e-commerce platform development to an offshore center. Midway through, the provider reorganized and 60% of resources turned over, delaying production by three months.
Managed Dedicated Team: A Middle-Ground and the Edana Model
Reserving a managed dedicated team combines flexibility, control, and continuity through a structured and monitored delivery capacity. This model secures quality while reducing administrative burden.
With Swiss head office governance and execution by an Eastern European subsidiary, this setup offers the best balance of cost and performance.
Structured Capacity and Flexibility
A managed dedicated team is sized to your needs: a full-time developer, a part-time project manager, a QA engineer, and a technical lead. This mix ensures oversight of best practices and coverage of the entire Agile cycle.
You adjust resources based on peak and low workloads without hiring or layoffs. All HR and administrative formalities are handled by the provider, simplifying day-to-day management.
In case of absence or turnover, the managed team provides a trained replacement to maintain knowledge continuity.
Swiss-Led Governance
The Swiss head office drives business analysis, the roadmap, and quality audits according to recognized ISO standards. Each milestone undergoes formal checkpoints and transparent reporting.
Code review, security, and testing processes are standardized and validated by local experts before each delivery.
You retain a single point of contact who coordinates communication, avoids silos, and ensures contractual commitments are met.
Cost Advantage in Eastern Europe via Georgia
The Georgia subsidiary offers an IT talent pool at competitive rates, directly supervised by the Swiss head office. You benefit from a favorable cost-to-competence ratio without classic offshore pitfalls. Discover how hiring developers in Portugal complements a similar model.
Georgian teams work in dedicated offices with secure infrastructure and an agile collaboration environment. Time-zone differences are minimal, and strong English proficiency ensures smooth communication.
This model combines European cultural proximity with substantial savings, with no compromise on deliverable quality.
Secure Your IT Recruitment with a Proven Model
Freelance marketplaces hide significant risks: scope creep, variable quality, disputes, and security gaps. Traditional models (staff augmentation, outsourcing) offer some control but struggle to balance flexibility and solid governance.
The managed dedicated team approach—backed by Swiss governance and Eastern European execution—ensures reliable delivery, continuous skill development, and transparent management. You get offshore-level speed and cost control while preserving quality and business proximity.
Whatever your context, our experts are available to assess your needs, design the optimal role distribution, and guide you in setting up a managed dedicated team perfectly aligned with your objectives.

















