According to Handy, about 80% of its bookings come from repeat customers. As of July 2015, it employs a full-time staff of at least 160 and has engaged about 10,000 cleaners to work on its platform. Handy operates in 28 cities in the United States, and several cities in Canada, and the United Kingdom. In October 2018, ANGI Homeservices which owns HomeAdvisor and Angie's List acquired Handy. This round of funding led by Fidelity Management & Research included contributions from several of the company’s previous investors. Handy also announced its series D round of 50 million dollars. Īs of November 2015, the company planned to include the delivery and assembly of furniture as some of the services offered. In June, just a month before, Handy had announced completing its one millionth booking on the platform. Immediately following the announcement of Homejoy’s expected shutdown, Handy offered a $1000 signing bonus to any Homejoy workers looking to switch to Handy’s service. However, Homejoy shut down in July 2015 without being acquired amid worker classification suits. In May 2015, TechCrunch reported that Handy was in talks to acquire its rival Homejoy. In March 2015, Handy announced another round of funding led by TPG Growth, which raised 15 million dollars. In November 2014, Handy was sued over a number of alleged labor violations, including that the company was deliberately misclassifying its employees as independent contractors. Mopp’s founders Pete Dowds and Tom Brooks stayed on to continue Handy’s expansion in the European market. After the acquisition, Mopp continued to operate under the same name, adding the subtitle “powered by Handy” to its brand. A week after the rebrand, Handy acquired Mopp, a similar London-based service, at an undisclosed valuation. In September 2014, Handybook changed its name to Handy. It also reported that the service was being used to complete about 10,000 jobs per week. By this point, the company had expanded operations to twenty-six cities in North America, including Vancouver and Toronto. In June 2014, Handybook raised US$30 million in a series B round of investment led by Revolution Growth. By May 2014, the company was employing nearly a hundred people. In January 2014, Handybook completed the acquisition of the company which helped establish its West Coast presence. The same month Handybook began talks to acquire the San Francisco-based Exec, a similar service for hiring people to complete household tasks. The following year in October 2013, Handybook raised further 10 million dollars from existing investors along with David Tisch's BoxGroup and other investors. In October 2012 Handybook raised 2 million dollars in seed financing from General Catalyst Partners and Highland Capital Partners. Handybook was launched with incubation support from the Harvard Innovation Lab. The Handybook name was chosen as it was a place to book handyman and cleaning services. The online household services marketplace they created follows a sharing economy approach and a business model that has been compared to Uber. In fall 2012, it moved its headquarters from Cambridge, Massachusetts to Manhattan. Handy was founded in summer 2012 as Handybook by Oisin Hanrahan, Umang Dua, Weina Scott (a computer science graduate from Harvard University) and Ignacio Leonhardt (a graduate of Duke University and the London School of Economics). The company was acquired by ANGI Homeservices in October 2018. Founded in 2012 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the now New York-based company operates services in United States, United Kingdom, and Canada. Handy is an online two-sided marketplace for residential cleaning, installation, and other home services. Home cleaning, handyman tasks, home improvement services, assembly Oisin Hanrahan, Umang Dua, Ignacio Leonhardt, Weina Scott
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