Categories: Uncategorized

NowMaid: Do You Trust The Person Who Cleans Your House?

Ayo Omojola recently relocated to Mountain View, where he’s been putting long hours into Flypad. He’s the first to admit there were a few times when his apartment got kind of out of control. But when he went to find a professional cleaning service, he was struck by how piecemeal the process was, and wondered how he could research whether an agency was trustworthy without extensive contacts in the area. “I wasn’t as concerned about price as being able to trust the people who came,” he said. “My biggest concern was trust.” Though he’s still working full time on Flypad, an app that uses smartphone accelerometers to turn handsets into video game controllers, Omojola started working in his spare time on a service to find, rate and hire domestic cleaners, which he’s calling NowMaid. Though the project is clearly a species within the genus TaskRabbit, which Omojola says he’s used before, a more direct inspiration was Uber, a svelte towncar service that lets its drivers rate riders, in addition to the other way around. Like Uber, Omojola plans to introduce NowMaid in very limited areas – San Francisco and New York, to start with – and listen closely to user feedback before tweaking and expanding the service. “It’s a very personal thing,” Omojola said. “It only makes sense that if someone walks into your house and cleans stuff, we need a way to capture whether you felt good about it. If someone cleans your house and you only give them a single star, that’s a very important data point.” At $99/hour for two maids, it’s not going to be the cheapest service around. Omojola plans to use referral discounts – $10 off for signing up, and another $10 if you invite a friend – to sweeten the deal. One challenge facing the project is that some number of domestic workers in the United States are undocumented immigrants, who cannot lawfully work in the country. Omojola is currently researching whether working with a maid service that turns out to employ undocumented workers could introduce any liability for NowMaid. “I’m not going to be doing this if I know I’m going to breaking the law,” he said. Though he has high hopes for the service, which will launch this fall, he’s looking at it as a bootstrapped experiment at this point. “It’s more of a pet project for me,” he said.

Image: pond5
Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Recent Posts

HostMilano 2025: AI and Automation Transform Professional Kitchen Operations

HostMilano 2025 concluded its 44th edition on October 26 and remains the premier world fair…

2 días ago

Prezent AI reaches latest milestone following recognition as top software company in 2025

As the new year approaches, the Software Report—a trusted source for market research and industry…

3 días ago

Ness Digital Engineering and Vendavo to usher in new era of AI-led innovation

Now that AI has been on the scene for a number of years, we can…

3 días ago

AI is reengineering orthopedic systems through new multi-layer software architectures

The rapid evolution of orthopedic technology is no longer being driven by devices alone. Instead,…

2 semanas ago

Digital credentialing enters a new phase with the arrival of I.C.E. Exchange 2025 in Phoenix

The credentialing industry’s calendar is turning toward Phoenix this month, where the I.C.E. Exchange will…

2 semanas ago

Tax season gets an upgrade as Deduction raises $2.8M and launches its AI-powered tax agent

Deduction today announced the launch of “Taylor, CPAI,” the first AI tax accountant built for…

2 semanas ago