I am happy to see a sense of reality being forced into some of these companies. Building a business on people rather than tech is a much much tougher thing to do both execution wise and financially.
And so the real innovation if someone wants to "change the world" without trying to cheat the system is to find a way to make a profitable business with a huge part of the business being used to pay salaries.
For many entrepreneurs who are used to thinking about business as something which is based on software, servers and an internet connection, this is completely uncharted territory. You don't reap the benefits of scaling your business as if it's just a matter of adding more servers.
The primary challenges with these kind of business if they are to be built on a solid foundation is.
1) Patience – It takes a long time to scale an employee based business up to anything worthwhile and sustainable
2) Selective – You have to be smart about which sectors actually have enough money and need for your service to make a proper ROI
3) Employee satisfaction. You can't just treat your people as if they are freelancers without giving them freelance opportunities. Instead you have to really care about your people and make them want to work for your company and do a great job.
It's that manual labour thats going to be your brand, not your backend server or the customers mobile app.
Finally someone states the obvious that Homejoy's problems had little to do with employee classification and far more to do with the basic business model (trying to convert a match-making situation into a transactional business) and sloppy execution.
Basically don't overestimate how much the 'adults' understand. There is a huge amount of hand-waving, FOMO, leaps of faith, etc... by VCs when they make (and manage) investments. When things work, they are explained ex-post facto in visionary terms. When they don't... people forget soon anyway.
Homejoy also had terrible customer service. I bought a cleaning deal advertised on facebook, the day of the appointment I tried to cancel and they charged me an additional $10 to cancel. That's right, I paid more than the cost of the appointment to cancel. I tried to get my money back from them through support but they wouldn't budge. I just refuted the charges on my credit card and got it back that way. It was a nightmare dealing with them. Good bye, and good riddance.
I think the GP would have been fine forfeiting what he had paid for a cancellation. Homejoy was asking him to pay MORE for a canceled appointment than if the appointment had actually happened, ie he would lose what he had paid plus $10. How is that fair?
Homejoy was certainly not fair to try and charge $10 MORE to cancel the order. But 'forfeiting' your credit card charge just because you could not or did not cancel in time, that doesn't skirt the boundaries of fairness on any service.
We almost did a startup like this when we were in YC and looking for new opportunities after we closed our previous startup. However we did some real-world experiments and ran the calculations and could see no way it could work. Here in London we have a lot of recent migrants meaning it's a race to the bottom in terms of hourly rate. You can't make a margin on that... The math just doesn't work. At the time I felt a bit stupid when, months later, Homejoy and several other startups entered the scene. However, I'm very glad we stuck to our guns. The only companies making real money in this market are large established agencies with cleaners on the payroll. And where's the fun/disruption in that? ;)
This article does a pretty good job highlighting many of the challenges in this market. Although I'd like to point out one additional aspect - in the $400-$800 billion home services market, I would say less than half of that is actually consumer facing. I don't have an exact number, but I would estimate that 50-75% of that market is actually B2B. It is commercial property managers, apartment complexes, general contractors, etc hiring smaller contractors (cleaners, painters, carpet installers, window washers, etc) for recurring business, sometimes contracts up to several hundred thousand dollars/year. At that size of contract, you had better be able to provide trained, high quality workers who can consistently deliver. What these larger businesses are paying the smaller contractors for is managing and training of the labor that actually does the work. Once the contract is set up, all that is required of the larger contractor is a phone call - not much more work than tapping a few buttons on an app on your phone, but much less cost to the smaller contractor who doesn't need to develop software to win business. This aspect of the industry makes it very difficult for software to have a big impact, and it probably partially why there are no profitable success stories in this space (Angie's List, Yelp, all the on-demand startups, all have yet to achieve consistent profitability).
I always thought that Homejoy were planning to automate as much as possible, if not everything, related to cleaning services using robotics and stuff, and that humans were only a temporary measure while developing technology. Sadly no, they were optimizing for human cleaning. They could have kept them as contractors while support them providing free education and resources to reallocation in the work force. This would be much better to society instead of organizing the modern slavery.
I've done a lot of cleaning and as a job I generally liked it. You have a set task, you see the result, and when you are done you are done. It can be quite rewarding. The pay sucked, but that's far from slavery.
Interesting. Although I could afford it, I never allowed myself to hire cleaners because I refused to explore a person to clean my own mess. My mess, my responsibility, I clean it. It's interesting to know that people would willingly work with cleaning even if they have other options.
Maybe you meant "wage slave"? There's probably better terms, becase as soon as you mention "slave" people will think you mean slavery, and "wage slaves" are not in any sense slaves.
Just because no single person owns you, still doesn't mean you are working for basic subsistence in slavery-like conditions. And others knowing that can, and will abuse you because of that.
Sure. Does any work that complies with current US law meet that bar though?
Children working on tobacco farms maybe do count. (And even if they're not slaves it's still a big problem).
But to suggest that domestic cleaners working for Holejoy os pretty insulting to the people who are working in illegal slave like conditions in the US.
Separating whites from coloreds [1] should be achievable now. There's a robot that can take a pair of socks and determine if one is inside out and if so invert it. That involves more subtle distinction of colors than merely separating whites from coloreds should.
Realistically, robot house-cleaners that can compete with a human both in terms of ability and cost are decades away. Not something you can build a business on today.
I'm talking about different robots for different tasks. We already use a lot of them. In terms of costs, this is the catch, these robots could be delivered on-demand in the houses. This could be the startup. Even if the "perfect" technology were decades away, this is a good mission, with a good transient plan.
Yes, Homejoy could have developed and provided to its cleaners tools to make the cleaning faster (for example: something that would be to a toilet brush what a hoover is to a mop - I have no idea how to develop such a thing), making the overall cleaning cheaper - it would take less time, and cleaners charge per hour.
I'm guessing, just like in the UK, domestic services are very much cash in hand driven and homeowners are desperate to "find somebody good" they can trust and not let go of them. By removing Homejoy after the evaluation period, the homeowner and service provider get into a stronger relationship, that is cheaper for the homeowner and more financially rewarding for the service provider.
Homejoy's competition is Yelp and Google local search. Both of them do roughly the same job for less money. Homejoy just isn't needed.
As Pando Daily keeps pointing out, the only Uber-like business that works is Uber. Uber has an incredible valuation, but their revenue and profit numbers are lousy. Their revenue is about $450m/yr, but they are not profitable. They are, however, building a fancy new headquarters, always a bad sign.
Startup valuations are a function of how much they needed to be valued at to raise their last round. It's entirely projected future value; it bares no relation whatsoever to their current position in terms of revenue and profit.
Sorry? How can a taxi service (uber) be running at three times the size of the taxi market?
Is this dodgy accounting, grey market taxi services previously (understating size of market) or has uber genuinely expanded the market by reducing friction?
> uber genuinely expanded the market by reducing friction?
Absolutely, particularly in places like SF (where getting a cab was a giant hassle and very unreliable). By making on-demand transportation viable in way more places, Uber has definitely expanded the market. There are tons of times and places where I never would have tried to get a cab but happily order an Uber.
I started using Sidecar, and more recently Uber, because I couldn't get a cab ride.
There were plenty of times I tried calling for a cab in SF's SOMA district, only to be disappointed when either no one answered the phone and/or no one showed up. If you happen to live in an area where one can realistically have a chance of hailing a cab, and you call for a cab, it's probably more like ordering a pizza. Place the call, and it'll show up eventually.
> uber genuinely expanded the market by reducing friction?
Based on personal experience, I would have no trouble believing this (particularly for SF, Seattle, or other cities which lack a dense taxi presence). Prior to Uber's arrival in Seattle I walked most places or took a bus. I had never personally used a cab in my life until I went on a corporate trip at age 29, had no rental car, and there was nothing more convenient between the airport and my hotel. I think since then I've used traditional cabs ~four more times, two of which were in NYC.
On the other hand, I take Uber 2-3 times a week because it dramatically cuts down on time spent in transit and is essentially zero hassle.
It's an anecdote, but I expect I am not alone in dramatically upping my use of this sort of service due to Uber.
They could very easily be profitable if they wanted to slow down their growth. Instead they're investing all their funds back into expansion into new cities and fighting the regulatory battles in order to win the biggest markets - which is exactly what their investors want/need them to do.
Uber is a highly disciplined company. I'd completely expect their new HQ plans to be focused on optimising the company's performance, not extravagance.
"Uber is a highly disciplined company. I'd completely expect their new HQ plans to be focused on optimising the company's performance, not extravagance."
I'd argue that Homejoy's real competition is Handy, which seems to be alive and well. I'm surprised the article didn't mention Handy at all, because it is the most relevant comp for Homejoy.
The real story here is that Handy outcompeted Homejoy and disrupted their business. Both companies define ladders for professionals to climb by claiming and servicing more bookings and receiving high ratings. Pay for pros at the top of the Homejoy ladder was the same as starting pay at the bottom of the Handy ladder. Pros quickly started to favor Handy starting with the top performers. This is an effective demonstration of the utility of a rather small change to the balance toward quality as discussed in the article.
2014 was 450. On target for 6x this year and 3x next year. Also, most of the early markets are profitable. Investing in growth > profitability at this point.
25% of the wages? Sounds like they were just greedy as much as anything else. Of course the customers are going to be looking to cut out the middleman as soon as possible with that kind of commission.
If they'd reduced their cut to say 5% for repeat bookings between the same client and worker, they could have justified the high initial percentage as a matchmaking fee. But otherwise, yeah, people were just going to take their professional relationship offline and cut them out of the loop.
Exactly. Or maybe no commission at all on repeat bookings? Then there's no pressure for the relationship to jump the walled garden and you keep the customer on the site to come to you first for future searches.
I'm using Handy here in London and it's amazing, cheap (so I tip the cleaner very well) and they will do a 2h clean (usually here in London most don't bother, want 3h) really early in the morning.
I imagine homejoy would be the same. I have no idea how the company will make money however.
Same as patents. You don't get to just ignore reams of existing regulation because you tack 'but with a computer' on a business model. Uber is only succeeding on the basis of having escaped notice for long enough that they could build coffers to bully their way into markets. The public is more aware now than it was then.
SV/StartupLand needs to get over this idea that they can magically just make the world do what it wants and pretend things like legislation and human rights don't exist when they get in the way of their business model.
You've got to work hard in the system like everybody else.
This is a dumb sentiment and the article is actually one of the few that ignores the bogus culprit of employee classification in Homejoy's demise.
It really makes very little sense to forbid a person from driving a passenger for money. The AirBnB situation is actually grayer since zoning does make sense (who wants a revolving door of random tourists in their apartment building or even residential neighborhood?).
Uber and AirBnB are succeeding because they are delighting customers in a rather visceral way.
It really makes very little sense to forbid a person from driving a passenger for money
No one is suggesting people shouldn't be allowed to drive for money, nor that Uber shouldn't be allowed to run their service, but simply that if Uber drivers are doing the work of employees they should get the benefits of being employees.
The only real difference that would make is that Uber would be a little more expensive to use. It'd still be cheaper that a taxi. I think that's quite reasonable if it means Uber drivers have a happier, more stable life.
Oh, the employee thing. First, I think the contractor classification is totally appropriate for Uber drivers. But if you really want to classify them as employees, I wouldn't be surprised if Uber makes even more money paying min wage and keeping the surge.
There is also the slight problems of inadequate insurance and tax evasion.
The reason the taxi industry was originally regulated was the competition between drivers and taxi firms was literally cut-throat. While it might be good for consumers in the short run it won't be so good when we end up in a race to the bottom on the back of extreme competition.
Legislation has nothing to do with 'human rights'. Especially in the transportation space. Regulation only existed, to the extent that it did, because the taxi cartel bought politicians and than they outlawed competition.
The rhetoric of consumer safety, 'fairness', congestion etc. is just that, rhetoric.
Absolutely. The taxi cab industry is example number one for regulatory capture. The foolish talk about "employee rights" for Uber drivers makes no sense. The market will determine the rate for labor of any types, Uber drivers included. All legislation around "employee rights" will do is take them away. Why is it necessary for the government to make illegal a voluntary exchange between Uber and drivers at any wage and any labor agreement? Either can walk away at any time. If Uber wasn't providing these drivers a service, they wouldn't sign up.
That's my default view, but then I get surprised by both Uber and airbnb. StartupLand is one place where these limits are tested and you and I aren't the final arbiters of when or where they'll be overcome.
And so the real innovation if someone wants to "change the world" without trying to cheat the system is to find a way to make a profitable business with a huge part of the business being used to pay salaries.
For many entrepreneurs who are used to thinking about business as something which is based on software, servers and an internet connection, this is completely uncharted territory. You don't reap the benefits of scaling your business as if it's just a matter of adding more servers.
The primary challenges with these kind of business if they are to be built on a solid foundation is.
1) Patience – It takes a long time to scale an employee based business up to anything worthwhile and sustainable
2) Selective – You have to be smart about which sectors actually have enough money and need for your service to make a proper ROI
3) Employee satisfaction. You can't just treat your people as if they are freelancers without giving them freelance opportunities. Instead you have to really care about your people and make them want to work for your company and do a great job.
It's that manual labour thats going to be your brand, not your backend server or the customers mobile app.