Thumbtack......

Thumbtack has always been dubious in my book. Back when they started out many providers believed that they had people posting for work just to generate application fee revenue. And I tend to agree. For data recovery I'd bet the majority of the "jobs" are really techs scamming. Almost all of the calls I see the drive is making noises. So at best, a firmware update might help. I'd bet most of the calls are 30 minute drive by's. "Yep, did the best I could but no luck, so it's only $75. Next step is $1000's".

Good luck surviving at $55 an hour in CA, maybe if you work after hours and weekends only in addition to your Job at McDonalds.

That's not hourly. That's flat rate! Of course some of them may not be at the customer premise. Drop off and pickup. But still the rates are a joke. Unfortunately there is real data. Such as actual outcomes.

But, like other Internet wonders, they've got the VC's lined up. Google Capital supposed signed on for $100 million.
 
Rates don't seem to vary much. Same rate in WI as MA is what it says which I don't even believe. The rate drops by $5 for my brother in Alaska even though everything there costs three times as much. Hmm.....
 
I tried Thumbtack for awhile and never got a job out of it. The call backs and respones I got were all shady and never led to an actual job.

I stopped using it 2 weeks ago. Even if it's slow I rather focus on strengthening areas of my business rather than deal with clientele like that.
 
I briefly had an account on Thumbtack what few customers I did get were some of the worst I closed and deleted my account and never looked back the clients were few and they were as bad as the worst people on craigslist.
 
I still have an account but I only attempt to quote clients REAL close to me. I just use the need more info and have them bring it in for an evaulation/quote. I get a few bites and jobs. If I can get them in the door or on the phone I usually get the job. (if it is worth doing)
 
For my area the pricing isn't inaccurate, but it's deceptive.

Looking at the breakdown it's expecting you to pay for pickup / delivery, diagnostics, and then some hourly rate to handle the actual issue.

In the end, the rate is virtually identical to mine if you add it all up into a cohesive service.

This is just playing games with numbers to make it look cheaper, I have little interest in complicating my invoices in such a way.
 
I've had some moderate success with Thumbtack. Most people that call from there are cheap, but if you can get at least 30% non cheapwads to call you then it's worth the money. I'm sure your success will vary depending on your area.
 
I've had some moderate success with Thumbtack. Most people that call from there are cheap, but if you can get at least 30% non cheapwads to call you then it's worth the money. I'm sure your success will vary depending on your area.

I've said this before - they can't say no if you don't ask. That's why I'll sign up for these places and bid accordingly.
 
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Speaking from an advanced data recovery service provider perspective... Also attached a snapshot of Google results below.

Although from Thumbtack's and other portals' marketing perspective makes sense, there are several problems:
1) What does "best" mean? If it is the best in data recovery locally (even nationally), then it does NOT make sense at all - completely misleading. The "best" for me would be having the proper tools and expertise to carry out the job (not the cheapest nor the closest even regionally close, which is sort of what Thumbtack emphasizes on in the description links posted above).

2) In my opinion, from the customer's perspective, there is a major misunderstanding, thus misleading situation, when it comes to data recovery company service VS. computer repair/IT company offering data recovery service. There is obviously an issue with the extend of ability to recover data from all sorts of problems by computer repair/IT outfits, which typically manage to recover data from devices with very light/mild problems. As result, this reflects accordingly in their quotes, namely prices on the low end. This is what I believe is one of the main drivers for what drags down significantly the Thumbtack average price. When there is a customer with a device that sustained major failure(s), naturally the price will be much higher, which in turn will cause the customer to freak out and become confused and/or suspect of what should be a more realistic quote on the higher end quote. This would naturally result in low conversion (at least for the data recovery companies).

3) I doubt that, when choosing the price on a Thumbtack drop-down price menu, Thumbtack can differentiate if that price is for a diagnosis only, for the service only, per a specific amount of hours, for either diagnosis or the actual service, etc. Therefore, leading to an entirely disappointment of price misrepresentation in the sense of customer price expectation. Once again, this is leads to low conversions.

4) Obvious lack of details presented by the customer in the little form leads inability for a service provider to honor the same quote ONCE the contact is made and details are discussed and/or discovered during the diagnosis phase. Again, leading to an unpleasant state for both service provider and customer, often leading to no conversion as far a paying job goes.

There are other that I missing, but will stop here for now.

I have used Thumbtack, but with a high degree of selectivity. I have had some success, but also disappointments.

I have run some experiments, where I sometimes seen exactly identical requests (namely in the free typing area) in different locations in the country, which brought in question the authenticity of a service request. It would be nice if other were willing to pay attention to the requests and make notes of this and provide feedback here. No need to quote them, just check on the requests.

As a community here, we can rule out who is real or not and potentially drive those portals to complete transparency and better customer education.
 

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I sometimes seen exactly identical requests (namely in the free typing area) in different locations in the country, which brought in question the authenticity of a service request.

From the very beginning there were questions about the authenticity of service requests. I also believe that Thumbtack was padding the rolls so to speak. Early on I'd submit a quote, it would get looked at immediately, so no refund, but never heard back. This was a common complaint.
 
From the very beginning there were questions about the authenticity of service requests. I also believe that Thumbtack was padding the rolls so to speak. Early on I'd submit a quote, it would get looked at immediately, so no refund, but never heard back. This was a common complaint.
I am with you, so annoying.

Though in some cases, as I have purposely experienced, it is also the people being inconsiderate, negligent or just not sure how to properly use the system (especially elderly). For example, they often only provide the email address (no phone number). Once the request goes through, the customer does not go check their email, and the quote email from us service providers just sits there unattended (or maybe goes to span, idk). I know this because I have experimented on customer who did provide the phone number, by I waited for a while to call them to see if they open the email. Then I call them and ask "did you have a chance to look at the quote we provided?". The answer is often "no."

I feel that the proper honest transparent way for Thumbtack and the rest of the portals is to provide a refund to all those service providers the customer chose not to hire. Charge only the one that got hired. Obviously not as a profitable model, but it is honest and fair, I believe.
 
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Those data recovery rates are laughable at best.

The computer repair prices are "close" to mine, some are off by a tad though. The one I really got a laugh at was (pizza tech?):

For example, RCR Computer Services in Texas charges $30 per hour for on-site repair versus $20 per hour for remote support.

This guy is in Lewisville, about 50 miles south of me. He's either a pizza tech, works another job and does this part time OR is rich as hell.
 
The average cost seems to just be a flat out lie, and not even concealed. For my area they say the average cost of data recovery is between $60 and $180. Then they have two example companies rates that are $250 + $60/hr each hour after 3 hours. The other is a flat $375 for hdds, and $225 for flash drives.

Like, what?
 
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