Data Entry Project Examples

I have added a few demo Data Entry project examples below and added screenshots of real similar projects from Upwork. You will find similar real Data Entry projects on freelance marketplaces such as Upwork and Fiverr. 


I believe you will find the examples helpful to understand Data Entry project types and how it works in real life freelance working field.

Demo Project: One

I have two Scanned Images or PDF files which I need to have in two Microsoft Word documents.

Can you please type them out with all the formatting and footer info? Please use Arial font with the size 11.

Please download the files from the links below:

1. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1va2ucw_I-Oqh8Is0iSiRixXMIgcHDTQl/view?usp=sharing

2. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZRjrhKJnp7e7e7SiyEu4xnNaqSqIX5tD/view?usp=sharing

Make sure you’re putting all texts, background color, and formatting accurately as they are in the documents.

Similar Project on Upwork

sone448rmjavhdtoday015943 min

Demo Project: Two

I have 1 page with some names and contact details to be entered into a spreadsheet. Either an Excel .CSV or .XLSX file will be fine.

I need data entered including Name, Title, Company, Street Address, City, State, ZIP, Phone, Fax, Email, Website. (when information is available on the resource file)

You will find the resource PDF file from the link below:


https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Fb2ilibgmVX-giN8eYRBx3vdr8qH1OCj/view?usp=sharing 

Similar Project on Upwork

sone448rmjavhdtoday015943 min

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Demo Project: Three

Use tripadvisor (https://www.tripadvisor.com/ ) website and find and build a list of 20 Restaurants who are good for meetings in New York City.

We need the following information fields in an Excel File or in a Google Spreadsheet:

Restaurant Name

Website

Address

Phone Number

Email Address and

How many reviews they have.

Here is an example spreadsheet with the formattings: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1s8nEEb8VoEmA7GZmySvpw-BbtEG13scdLi48MYoWIXs/edit?usp=sharing 

Similar Project on Upwork

sone448rmjavhdtoday015943 min

Demo Project: Four

Please collect 30 run clubs' names, addresses, and emails from the following website - https://www.rrca.org/find-a-running-club.

Enter them into a Google Spreadsheet.

Example Spreadsheet:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1VR2qwePrOPoFxvZTjKPKrJbble9h4HSuq7JV7XqUPI8/edit?usp=sharing 

Similar Project on Upwork

sone448rmjavhdtoday015943 min

Demo Project: Five

I have a list of 50 companies with names and domain addresses in the following spreadsheet:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1AU0nA_p_UqUHA87LQS9qbPRlsq0z4ZUruL5PbXJhnns/edit?usp=sharing

I want you to find me the business Address, Phone Number, CEO/Founder/Owner/Partner’s name, Title when possible.

For me, it would take only 30 minutes, but let me know your situation and progress.

Similar Project on Upwork

sone448rmjavhdtoday015943 min

Sone448rmjavhdtoday015943 Min -

Taken together, the sequence becomes a small narrative encoded in compression: a person (sone) trying to name or secure something (448rmj), noting the immediacy of now (today), and measuring the moment (01:59:43 min). It suggests an act: sending, saving, timing. It suggests a failure too — an act caught half-formed by autocorrect, by haste, by the way digital life fragments and renames itself.

Consider what remains when we reduce experience to tokens. We create logs to anchor memory: filenames, timestamps, short messages meant to summon a richer interior. But when the surrounding context is gone, those tokens become riddles. They ask us to imagine the scene: who typed this? Was it a lover encoding a rendezvous? A developer naming a build before midnight? A parent filing a voice note at 1:59 a.m. to catch a child’s breathing? Or someone, somewhere, leaving themselves a breadcrumb to find later. sone448rmjavhdtoday015943 min

Finally, treat it as a prompt for making meaning. We are compilers of random traces. We can write stories from fragments and find ethics in accidents. This string asks you to be a detective and a poet. To salvage a sense of human continuity from the mechanical scrim of our tools is not denial of loss but a creative engagement with it: we choose stories that honor the strangeness. Taken together, the sequence becomes a small narrative

What do we do with a string that looks like a code and a clock and a secret all at once? Treat it as an artifact from a future archaeology of our present — a fossilized fragment of habits, error, and intention. Read it as sentence, as map, as the residue of a life lived in quick taps and partial attention. Consider what remains when we reduce experience to tokens

So let “sone448rmjavhdtoday015943 min” be both a relic and an invitation — an invitation to notice the small sigils we leave behind, to invent the lives that could have produced them, and to remember that in the thinnest inscriptions of the digital age there still lingers the thick presence of human longing, error, and hope.

There is a human pulse behind this: “sone” could be a name, a mistyped “someone,” or the syllable of a private language. The cluster “448rmj” looks like a key carved by a machine, or a password replaced by a poem. “avhdtoday” drags the adverb “today” into a string that otherwise resists time, and “015943 min” pins it down to a precise duration or a single second stitched to a day.

This fragment is also a mirror. In a world of incessant metadata, the smallest characters can reveal relationships between people and machines. “Today” declares urgency; “min” keeps time from slipping; the alphanumeric core resists ordinary language. We shuffle between clarity and encryption: the desire to be understood, and the simultaneous need to obscure. We want privacy and connection in the same breath.