Hey, this is Kevin Davis, the CEO of Geekatoo. I just wanted to answer a few questions it sounds like you guys have about our service.
The general sentiment towards these kinds of companies is that they severely underpay. Never heard of the aforementioned company, but if it's truly a bidding system, then I can just imagine the Pizza techs gobbling this stuff up.
It all depends. We have customers who want something cheap, but they also want someone who can get the job done. As with any bidding system, you'll get people who underbid everyone else, but the customer will generally see that as "too good to be true". We generally have found that people pick the person with the highest geektitude score rather than cheapest price (as long as the bid sounds reasonable), even if it's more expensive than others.
What's more important is that Geekatoo will soon show the listings of those Geeks with a minimum score for those clients who want the job done now.
I think we have the deepest metrics whether Geeks are qualified that go beyond Yelp or most other websites, meaning as clients figure this out we're hoping to be the #1 destination for finding a qualified geek near you.
That means it's an investment, in that you're banking we're going to succeed or fail. If you get in early and build your score up, you'll be listed above latecomers (and it's free, so not getting jobs doesn't cost you anything). If you don't, you're letting others build their scores up so you'll be behind if we ever do get massively popular with your potential client base.
Just my 2 cents
Not in the US so cannot use the service but read about it on techcrunch. As all bid sites it will only be cheapskates unfortunally and even if you are skilled it is difficult to stand out in those kind of bids when all of the offerers are "unknown" for the buyer...
Not true. You can take skill tests, verify your college degree or certification, or do a number of things that make you stand out from the very beginning. You can make a very attractive profile and win jobs from the beginning if you make a point of it.
Um, those fees are horrible. 12% finders fee, plus 1.5 - 2.9% processing fee. By the time I set aside money for taxes and business expenses, I'm probably getting paid less than a W2 employee.
Like others stated, the only ones that will get anything from this platform are the Pizza Petes of the world.
Honestly we don't think that's terrible. No yearly fees, and a huge discount for repeat transactions with clients (goes from 12% to 3%). Plus, any clients that use your geekatoo.com/hire/(yourname) link to directly book you a la clickbooks are marked down to 3% (with the 1.5-2.9%). That's not a lot to ask for spending $0 on customer acquisition or advertising since we take care of all that.
I am on that Thumbtack site and it seems great, but the bids the people put in are just too low for me. It's like how I can't afford to send a tech to onsite OnForce jobs. Some of those bids are $35 a job. Really?
Come check us out. We have better ways to determine whether or not someone is skilled or not, and we're finding that people aren't necessarily choosing the cheapest bid, but whoever looks the most skilled to fix their problem. When you're talking about $400 to fix a printer, yeah that's too expensive. But when the difference is $40 for a kid who just got out of high school with no work experience, or $70 for someone who routinely fixed printer issues for years, they just want to know that the person they pick will fix the job.
....
I'm trying to build a site that makes your life easier. No system is perfect but I'm going to try to get as close as I can to coming up with a system that works for you as well as clients and allows us to take a fee that you guys think is fair and/or would be what you spend on customer acquisition.
Anyways, take care and I'm here if you have any questions!
Cheers,
- Kevin Davis
CEO
Geekatoo.com