At the training center of Indian startup Pronto, women sharpen their cleaning and kitchen skills while also learning how to send out an SOS if they ever feel unsafe while working in clients' houses. They’re preparing to join India's latest trend – providing household help for just $1 per hour.
Indu Jaiswar, 35, hopes doing household chores in her first job can help fund her son's dream of becoming a doctor. "This is what we've been doing in our own homes for years. Might as well get paid for it," said the mother of two.
In a country with an entrenched culture of outsourcing household work, Indian startups Pronto and Snabbit, and listed rival Urban Company are training thousands of domestic helpers.
Urban Company estimates India's rapidly growing cleaning services market is worth an estimated $9 billion and spread across 53 million households.
Like Uber drivers, the helpers receive bookings on their apps, directing them to apartments in assigned neighborhoods within minutes, and press a countdown timer in their apps before starting work. The potential annual earnings from working eight hours a day can be as high as $5,000 – a figure that far surpasses India's per capita income of around $3,000.
The companies are betting big, burning millions of dollars to lure busy professionals in cities like New Delhi and Mumbai with under-99-rupee ($1) offerings that have no global parallel. Similar services can cost around $30 an hour in the United States, and around $7 in China.
However, the craze among consumers and workers is tempered by concerns about women's safety in a country with high rates of sexual harassment. Unlike e-commerce couriers who spend just brief moments at doorsteps, housekeepers may spend hours inside private homes, exposing them to greater risks.
Soumya Chauhan, a principal at Dutch e-commerce investor Prosus, which has a stake in Urban Company, said she views worker safety as the fundamental operational challenge to solve.
"The platforms that successfully crack the safety protocols will earn the deepest consumer loyalty and the most sustainable market returns," she said.
Safety risks
Cognisant of the challenges for a business that mainly employs women, Snabbit and Pronto said they have an in-app SOS button that alerts area supervisors in case of distress, while Pronto also offers self-defense training.
"In the offline world, the rate of abuse for a lot of these domestic workers is super high," said Pronto's 23-year-old CEO Anjali Sardana, adding that her company is trying to comfort its workers by assuring legal and medical support when needed.
Urban Company, which also offers services like plumbing, declined to comment for this story. It has previously said it offers a women-only safety helpline and an SOS app feature.
Shabnam Hashmi, a women's rights activist, said the companies run extensive background checks on workers before onboarding them, but should also check customer credentials. Currently, users can simply log in to apps to book home help.
"How is it ever possible for these jobs to be safe for women – even with an SOS button? Unless they carry cameras, which is of course impossible, there is no way to know what happens behind that door," she said.
Pronto worker Jaiswar has found her own workaround: she always calls a customer before visiting a home and goes "only if there's a woman present."
Rapid expansion
The companies, meanwhile, are getting record orders.
Urban Company recorded its highest daily home services bookings of 50,000 in February. Snabbit's have grown to 35,000 orders a day.
Bain Capital-backed Pronto logged a record 22,000 daily bookings in March, up from 2,500 daily orders in October, and raised $25 million in new funding.
Pronto CEO Sardana said she started the business last year after spotting an opportunity to serve three sides: strong demand from customers for reliable maids, workers' need for more stable and safer jobs, and a gap in the market for a scalable service.
"It's possible to build a win-win-win business," she told Reuters.
Fuelling the trend is also India's lack of a do-it-yourself culture, and Indians' love for getting things done cheaply.
In Bengaluru, 30-year-old Dhruv, who uses only a first name, said he spent 100 rupees ($1) per hour for Urban Company's service to help unpack his utensils and hang curtains after moving house.
That helped him "save quite a bit of time and effort," but the price does matter: "I wouldn't pay 400 or 500 rupees for it."
Snabbit founder Aayush Agarwal said his service was becoming popular among young couples and singles who want to schedule housekeepers and not hire monthly domestic helpers who are infamous for skipping work.
Pronto is offering some visits for 25 rupees in Facebook ads with taglines like "Maid on Leave? Don't grieve," while an Urban Company three-visit pack costs 66 rupees an hour.
Snabbit ads said a customer booked a helper "just to peel 20 potatoes," while another had lined up a worker to "separate LEGO blocks by color."
The cash burn
Like many startups in their growth phase, the companies are paying their workers out-of-pocket to make the jobs attractive, but also doling out hefty discounts to reel in customers.
In October to December, Urban Company disclosures show it received 1.61 million home-help orders, each incurring a loss of 381 rupees ($4). The company says its "discounts are moderating," but its order values need to almost double to break even.
"Over a period of time, it is safe to say that it will become an earn-as-you-go model," said Rahul Taneja, partner at Lightspeed, which has backed Snabbit.
At the Pronto center, where workers get a uniform and are trained to wear polished shoes, posters revealed potential payouts: home helpers can earn $1.60 per hour for 12 hours of work daily in a month, 48% more than what a new customer pays.
At more than $500 a month, that's a big allure for Nisha Chandaliya, 22, who needs to support her ailing mother and has quit a call-center job that stretched long hours and paid only $180 a month.
"It's exhausting to clean six to seven homes, but I need the stability. I can't afford to go back," she said.