From rising rents to online competitors, local stores and restaurants
face enough challenges outside of their own doors that basic stuff like
scheduling employees’ shifts and breaks should feel easy. But that
process is still, too often, a mess of paperwork and data entry for
them.
A startup called Homebase has raised $6 million to make hourly work much easier to manage for every business on Main Street. Khosla Ventures led the round and was joined by Baseline Ventures and Cowboy Ventures.
The company’s cloud-based app was built with local businesses’ unique
needs in mind and is available as a free-to-use, or freemium app, with
paid for premium features.
Among other things, it helps them set a schedule for employees,
automatically remind employees when they have an upcoming shift with a
text alert, track whether employees are taking the breaks they’re
entitled to throughout their shifts, or whether they logged overtime
hours.
Overall, the app can help business owners avoid unexpected labor
costs, and stay compliant with labor laws, said Homebase founder and CEO John Waldmann. But more importantly it saves small business owners, on
average, five hours a week of administrative tasks the company claims.
Homebase plans to use the funding for sales, marketing and hiring,
but also to continue developing features that will solve different
schedule-related problems for small businesses.
For example, in the future, the company wants to help employers take
all their workers’ personal preferences into consideration when
scheduling. “That’s not something even Starbucks can do today,” the CEO
said. “And it can contribute to employees’ happiness in a very big way.”
To-date, Homebase claims to have recorded 20 million shifts worked
across 50,000 small businesses, and to have users in every state.
About 70% of the company’s clients are restaurants, from fast-casual
franchises to hotel bars and fine dining establishments, and 25% are
retailers, Waldmann said. Most users only own and operate one
storefront, but some have local chains with dozens of locations.
With the funding, Khosla Ventures’ investment partner Keith Rabois has joined the board of Homebase.
Previously an executive at PayPal, Square, and board member at Yelp,
Rabois said he invested in Homebase, in part, because of its early and
rapid customer adoption rates.
“Small businesses may not pay a lot per user, but at scale they are
worth a lot. So if you’re building tools for them, your distribution
strategy has to resonate instantly or you have no shot of succeeding,”
Rabois said.
Given their Series A round, Homebase should continue to focus on
gaining customers without spending a lot on marketing or advertising,
and on delivering software and a user experience that makes life easier
for small business owners, the investor said.
Homebase employs about 22 full-time today with office headquarters in
San Francisco and an outpost in Houston, Texas. To-date, every employee
at Homebase has previously held a retail or restaurant job, according
to Waldmann.
The Series A round brings Homebase’s total capital raised to $8 million after an earlier seed round of $2 million.
No comments:
Post a Comment