Uber and AirBnB caters to immediate needs for a short term engagement, so the dispatching capabilities are the real value (find me someone who can do X right now).
Homejoy is dispatching for a long term relationship, so it has a hard time staying engaged in the relationship as it progresses.
I think the skill is less important than the duration of the engagement for a dispatching service like this.
Upwork/oDesk connects people with long-term providers and are more or less able to avoid disintermediation by providing services that the providers want to take advantage of, like time tracking, payment processing, and tax documents. Companies like HomeJoy need to figure out what services their providers really crave and make those contingent upon using their platform. Maybe there isn't anything lacking like that in the home cleaning business.
Agreed! My point was not against the home cleaning industry, as it was the "dispatch-as-value-add" model. Tax and liability are probably the biggest "headaches" that could be managed by homejoy and ensure they retain their position in the relationship.
Anecdotally I pay Molly Maid to clean my apartment, because i don't want to deal with liability, legality or tax complications.
Uber and AirBnB caters to immediate needs for a short term engagement, so the dispatching capabilities are the real value (find me someone who can do X right now).
Homejoy is dispatching for a long term relationship, so it has a hard time staying engaged in the relationship as it progresses.
I think the skill is less important than the duration of the engagement for a dispatching service like this.