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Tired of Multitasking? Hire Rabbits to Help with Your Chores

August 1, 2011

TaskRabbit

Most of us know about the division of labor: instead of growing our own food, stitching our own clothes, and getting homeschooled, we can buy from grocers and tailors and study under worldly professors. But there’s a whole new division of labor springing from TaskRabbit, where we can rely on others to do even the minutest of our chores.

“TaskRabbit is focused on building a service marketplace that safely and reliably connects neighbors to get anything done,” explains Jamie Viggiano, TaskRabbit’s marketing director. On TaskRabbit, which launched a new iOS app on Thursday, users post tasks and runners bid on them. Once a task is completed, the runner gets paid and TaskRabbit takes a cut, usually around 15 percent.

Founded in 2008 as RunMyErrand, TaskRabbit rebranded after expanding beyond errands. But even “task” may not be broad enough: the postings include such oddities as holding a man accountable to his diet and buying tobacco from gas stations after midnight to verify that employees are checking IDs.

TaskRabbit is similar to Viatask, but already well established: it has launched in Boston, San Francisco, New York City, Los Angeles, and Orange County, and is coming soon to Portland, Seattle, and Chicago. This growth has been propelled by $5 million in funding led by Shasta Ventures.

Just as the old division of labor created specialized professions, this new division of labor may be carving out a new job title: the runner, or TaskRabbit. To earn their bunny ears, runners must pass a video interview, background check, and online training. But once they do, they have access to the thousands of tasks posted per month. They also get “carrots” for completing tasks, which can pay for free ones.

Given the time investment required—and the potential payoff—“TaskRabbit” could start showing up on resumes. Runners can find part-time jobs like executive assistant on the site, and four $30 tasks per weekday would add up to a modest salary. TaskRabbit’s iOS app makes this a feasible goal: users can post tasks without even typing by choosing a category and recording a video message, and runners can perform multiple tasks at once at popular destinations like Ikea and Whole Foods.

Like many e-commerce sites, TaskRabbit faces the challenge of combating fraud. So it has built a trusty community based on ratings of runners and posters, and it will help resolve disputes if a runner’s performance isn’t carrot-worthy. It also protects runners by automatically transferring payment three days (at most) after a task is completed.

For overworked startup founders, the lazy, and especially overworked, lazy founders, TaskRabbit can help you divide and conquer.



About the Author
Kira M. Newman

Kira M. Newman is a Tech Cocktail writer interested in startups, innovation, and new trends. In 2012, she returned from a 6-month whirlwind tour of Asia, where she met tons of welcoming, inspiring, and infectiously passionate entrepreneurs. Follow her @kiramnewman.

4 Responses to “Tired of Multitasking? Hire Rabbits to Help with Your Chores”

  1. [...] feature set than competitors and is building a sense of community in the process.  For instance, TaskRabbit (tagline: Get just about anything done by safe, reliable, awesome people.) has an urban focus [...]

  2. Lisa says:

    Great post. There are several good companies that tap the power of people and internet to get the work done. Here is a comparison list.
    1) WeGoLook.com – WeGoLook.com has over 7,000 nationwide lookers (background check verified) who will go anywhere in USA/Canada for an onsite inspection. They provide visual confirmation and a personalized report, completed by a real person, to verify a product, person, property or thing.
    2) Zaarly: Zaarly is a proximity based, real-time buyer powered market. Buyers make an offer for an immediate need and sellers cash in on an infinite marketplace for items and services they never knew were for sale.
    3) Agent Anything: People can post any service they need accomplished as well as the price they are willing to pay, and college students can perform these services to get paid.

  3. [...] for a posted price, then choose among offers. This model is slightly broader than competitor TaskRabbit, which focuses on tasks. Buyers and sellers can make deals on Zaarly’s online marketplace, or on [...]

  4. @myTaskAngel says:

    mytaskangel.co.uk is a UK based start up offering similar service.

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