How It Works

Your description is the contract. Here's how we turn your words into verified, completed work.

💡 The Key Insight

Your project description is the acceptance criteria. When you write "photograph every room and note any damage," that's exactly what the worker must deliver — and exactly what gets verified. The more specific you are, the better the result.

The Process

1

You Describe

Write what you need done in plain language. Be specific about what, where, and what counts as done. Our pre-built services (inspections, errands, photo docs) handle the structure for you. Custom projects let you describe anything.

2

AI Decomposes

Your project gets broken into atomic, sequential tasks. Each task is small enough for one person to complete and specific enough to verify. You review the breakdown before anything starts — if the plan doesn't look right, we adjust it.

3

Workers Execute

Workers claim tasks, go do the work, and submit photo proof plus notes. Payment is held in escrow until the work is verified — nobody gets paid just for showing up.

4

Bilateral Verification

This is the part that's different. When a worker claims task #3, they first verify that task #2 was done correctly. Every step checks the step before it. No single supervisor — the workers themselves form a verification chain.

Workers are paid for verifying, too. Accuracy is incentivized at every link in the chain.

5

You Get Results

Complete work with photo proof, timestamps, and a verification trail. For inspections, you get a PDF report. For custom projects, you get task-by-task deliverables. Track everything in real time on your tracking page.

Writing Good Descriptions

Your description is the single most important input. It determines how the project gets decomposed, what workers are told to do, and what gets verified. Here's how to write one that works.

✅ Be Specific About Deliverables

❌ Vague

"Check out the apartment and let me know how it looks."

✅ Specific

"Photograph every room in Unit 3A. Note any wall damage, stains, or broken fixtures. Check all appliances turn on. Report condition of flooring in each room."

✅ Define "Done"

❌ Open-ended

"Pick up some stuff from the store."

✅ Clear completion criteria

"Buy 2 gallons of Behr Ultra Pure White paint, 3 roller covers, and painter's tape from the Home Depot on Colorado Blvd. Deliver to 1847 Vine St Unit 3A. Photo of receipt and items at the door."

✅ Include Location and Access

❌ Missing context

"Photograph the building."

✅ Complete context

"Photograph the exterior of 3550 W 38th Ave, Denver. Front facade, side entrance, parking lot, and any visible signage. Lockbox code 4521 for interior access. Best time: before 9 AM (less foot traffic)."

Why Description Quality Matters

Traditional gig platforms let you post vague requests and figure it out through back-and-forth messaging. We don't do that. Your description gets fed to an AI that decomposes it into exact steps, and workers execute those steps to the letter. There's no chat. There's no "I'll figure out what they meant." Your words are the spec.

The upside: when you write a clear description, you get exactly what you asked for. The verification chain ensures every step matches your criteria. The downside: if you write "make it look nice," nobody can verify what "nice" means, and the result will be unpredictable.

Think of it this way: your description is the contract. Write it like you're telling a competent stranger exactly what to do.

Don't Want to Write Descriptions?

Our pre-built services handle the decomposition for you. Just fill out a form and we generate the right task structure automatically.

🏠
Inspections
$99 flat
🛒
Errands
From $39
🤝
Community
$15 flat
📸
Photo Docs
From $49
🚚
Pickup
From $29
🔧
Repairs
From $79

The Staking Protocol — How Quality is Guaranteed

Your payment doesn't go straight to the worker. It goes into escrow and releases in stages as work is verified:

Verify (1/3) — Workers earn money for checking the previous worker's output. Quality control is built into the payment structure.
Perform (1/3) — Released when both neighbors (previous and next step) confirm the work was done correctly.
Completion (1/3) — Held until the entire project is done. Everyone has skin in the game for the whole project, not just their step.

If something goes wrong, disputes follow a structured resolution process: bilateral negotiation first, then escalation. The protocol handles the hard parts so you don't have to.

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