This week, we got in touch with Y Combinator-backed founder, Shruti Shah, who is also an Entrepreneur in Residence at Silicon Valley Bank. Shruti was previously the founder and COO of Move Loot, an online marketplace for buying and selling used furniture. She shared about her expertise in hiring thousands of hourly workers for a successful logistics start-up.
Move Loot offers a much-needed service to individuals, by optimizing one's time and money while offering a unique user-friendly experience in buying and selling used furniture. It is currently the only provider of such services in the market. They realize that in bid to avoid the hassle, most people end up buying new items, harming their wallets and the planet! Move Loot solved this dilemma by creating an online marketplace where users can post furniture to sell, find furniture to purchase, and select delivery personnel to complete the process.
At Move Loot, Shruti led national expansion and general business operations. Over the course of three years, she and her co-founding team raised $22 million dollars to scale the business across the United States. Move Loot was featured in numerous publications including Forbes, TechCrunch, Bloomberg Business Week, CNN, TIME, Fortune and more.
Prior to Move Loot, Shruti worked at the New Schools Venture Seed Fund working with the fund partners on seed stage Ed Tech investing, and prior to that she was a public school teacher. She was honored by Forbes as a 2016 30 Under 30 recipient in Retail and E-Commerce and the Aspen Institute as an Aspen Ideas Festival Scholar in reimagining capitalism.
Shruti: At Move Loot, we hired a few hundred hourly employees to help us in running our truck and warehouse operations. Our hourly workers were W-2 employees - not contractors. At times when we were scaling quickly, we had to leverage external staffing agencies, like Blue Crew and Wonolo, to be able to hire sufficiently and meet the needs of our customers.
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Shruti: We would often hire through Blue Crew or Wonolo with the intent of converting some of those employees. We also created a group hiring strategy where we would email all of the hourly workers that applied for roles and encouraged them to attend an information session about the job. Once the session was over, we would ask those who were still interested to stay for interviews. This helped us with scheduling interviews and hiring people in batches. It also allowed us to do some group interviews to get an understanding of how an individual would function as part of a group.
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Shruti: ZipRecruiter, Indeed, Referrals from existing hourly workers, Craigslist, Wonolo, Blue Crew.
Shruti: This is a tough one - other than Workstream, I haven't really come across anything that innovative - hiring hourly workers can be a huge challenge for a variety of reasons including communication (not everyone checks email/has reliable phone communication), turnover, location changes etc - so what Workstream is doing is really cool.
Find out how else to optimize your hiring process with Workstream! Schedule a chat with us now to find out more!