The Best Stories and Series of the Movement all in One Place
An 8-part video series that goes deep into the Marks with Henry Kaestner and Pastor J.D. Greear.
An 8-part video series that goes deep into the Marks with Henry Kaestner and Pastor J.D. Greear.
— by Amanda Lawson
Social distancing. Masks. Shutdowns. These seem to be norms in a COVID-19 world. When it comes to the economic impact this pandemic has had, we’re only beginning to see the rising tide of waves to come. And yet, one company has used the pandemic to actually expand their operations to love and serve both customers and professionals in the home improvement space.
If you’ve found yourself with an increased list of home projects over the past few months, you’re not alone. The increase of DIY projects aided by the stay-home mandates and the loss of jobs and company shut downs due to COVID-19 revealed a great opportunity for both customers and pros. Enter Tülbelt—launched in March 2019 as a family endeavor—a platform that connects available professionals with a variety of projects, ranging from junk removal to appliance installation to painting and landscaping.
For founders and brothers, Vlad and Jan Vezikov, Tülbelt wasn’t just an opportunistic move; it was deeply personal. Their family immigrated to the United States from Russia in 1989. Their father, Vlad Sr., started his own painting business to support the family, regularly enlisting his sons in the work. However, as Russian immigrants working in blue collar trades at the end of the Cold War, Vlad Sr. did not always receive respect, or even decency, from customers. The brothers Vezikov witnessed how poor, minority, and blue-collar workers were treated—regardless of the quality of their work—and decided to do something about it. Joined by their brother-in-law, Dennis, the brothers developed Tülbelt, an online platform and app that solves the major pains of the home improvement industry, for both customers and professionals.
The process is simple: customers with project needs can post jobs on Tülbelt through the app or website and available professionals bid on the projects. When the customer accepts a bid, they pay the bid amount, plus a 13% service fee to Tülbelt, into escrow. Once the job is completed to the customer’s satisfaction, the full amount of the bid price is delivered to the professional. The company’s “Get Stuff Done” motto and this simple process helps turn to-do lists into to-done lists in a snap.
The “Get Stuff Done” mentality is shared not only by staff, professionals, but customers as well. Tülbelt works for customers by building accountability with pros; pros don’t get paid until the job is done to the customer’s satisfaction and customers can rate the pros after the work is done. It also streamlines the process of finding professionals by creating an atmosphere where only available candidates bid for jobs, dramatically cutting down the amount of time spent searching for a qualified pro.
Tülbelt also solves multiple major problems for professionals in this space. It bridges the opportunity and access gap that often prevents qualified pros from getting work. It also reduces corrupt business practices like profiteering and discrimination by building a merit-based gig economy. As a platform “built by pros, for pros,” the Vezikov’s understand the typical pains of professionals in the home improvement industry. By requiring customers to pay the bid amount upfront, pros can be confident that they will receive the full agreed-upon amount as soon as the job is done. They are treated with dignity and paid for the value they bring, not the time it takes to complete the job. Professionals can also rate the customer upon job completion—providing a unique accountability on both sides of the agreement.
For many of these craftsmen, especially in the wake of job loss and shutdowns due to COVID-19, there is a pipeline problem. While highly qualified in technical skills, pros without business acumen sometimes lack the connections and resources to break into the field on their own. Tülbelt gives them streamlined access to jobs and ensures they are paid their due on time. By empowering pros to take jobs directly, Tülbelt also cuts down on profiteering by contactors who would pay their employees less than they deserve. This also reduces the wealth divide between blue collar, independent professionals and white collar, big contractors, especially in regard to low income and immigrant communities.
What began as a side hustle now has over 21,000 registrations in 44 states, with over 6,000 posted projects. Motivated by the faith and personal passion of two brothers who believe that “every worker deserves his wage” and that capitalism can be redeemed through companies like Tülbelt, cofounder Jan Vezikov, explained the value of Tülbelt saying, “those who want to work will get their value and profiteers will have to pay people what they are worth.”
In the age of COVID-19 and the ever-increasing gig economy, Tülbelt serves as an example of a company that truly provides a win-win environment, while addressing some of the biggest hurdles to wealth building in underserved communities. According to Jan Vezikov, “we have seen thousands of pandemic-hit trades-pros find work through the platform. In particular, immigrant trade pros love the opportunities [Tülbelt] provides for them.”
Walter Kincey, a pro from Attleboro, Massachusetts, is one example of the hope and opportunity that Tülbelt brings. Options for work were limited for Kincey due to the pandemic. Yet, even in the wake of COVID-19, Kincey was making over $45,000 taking junk removal jobs on Tülbelt, using it to build a business and create wealth for his family and community. You can watch a brief testimony from Kincey here.
Another pro, Jose Hoxit, a married father of two, was hit hard by COVID shutdowns, leaving the family on the brink of homelessness. While meeting with his local pastor (Vezikov), Jose decided to try Tülbelt. Now, five projects in, the connections he has made have filled his schedule and enabled him to provide stability for his family.
Vezikov noted, the Tülbelt model is rooted in biblical principles that call for fair wages, treating people with respect, and providing access to opportunity for work, not simply charity. Success in gig economy work for these professionals can have significant impact on healing the racial divide and wealth gap by providing meaningful work that can help professionals build wealth for their families and communities.
Many times, it seems that we reserve our most fervent prayers for our biggest problems that are not easily solved by our human efforts. It’s like prayer is our final go-to problem-solving tool when we are stuck with our backs against the wall.
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With a deep-rooted identity in Christ, we can begin to find joy, inspiration, and meaning in whatever we do.
Creativity is something many of us do for free. Because we’re called to it. Explore how God’s creativity expresses itself through entrepreneurship.
As believers and business leaders, the curious question of artificial intelligence (AI) is one facing each of us. In what ways should we embrace this generational revolution? In what ways should we reject it?
Empathy requires vulnerability. Could I be brave enough to be vulnerable? If I wanted someone to rejoice or weep with me, I needed to let people know how I felt. Trust people with my emotions, needs, and mess.
Have you ever felt called to do something, and you knew beyond a shadow of a doubt it was God telling you to do it?
We are in the process of a tectonic transformation in the way we work and live – let’s rise to the challenge of using generative AI to speak and create life, rather than standing on the sidelines.
In Pierce Brantley's research, he's discovered that many well-meaning Christian business owners will get stuck at various stages of business without realizing it.
What 1 Timothy 6:9-10 Has to Say to Entrepreneurs about success and the love of money.
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Leaders understand that successful meetings result in learning, inspiration and alignment. If you want a successful outcome, you have to plan, prepare and execute when the day arrives. Here are a couple of ingredients we learned made the day truly significant…
A successful pharmaceutical entrepreneur shares his faith driven keys to success.
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While others were making risky subprime loans, we rowed close to shore safely in the sight of land by adhering to time-tested safety and soundness principles. While others thought that maybe we had lost our way in a brave new world, we thought differently.
When I pray, am I trying to convince God to bless my business? Or am I asking God to lead and direct the business He had provided? The hard reality is that I sometimes ask God to bless the business plans I had established and thinking that was enough.
By leading with questions, we can represent the way of Jesus in everyday life and create a culture of curiosity, respect, and continuous improvement within our organizations.
How can we move from being a change loather to becoming a change lover? Here are three actions that have helped me as a faith-driven entrepreneur.
Bill Yoh offers ten ways that faith fuels who he is in secular work environments, influencing how he leads, how he drives culture, and how he lives his core values.
One entrepreneur shares how she embraces the marketplaces as her place of ministry and works excellently, generously, and kindly for the glory of God. It’s never too late for the people around us to hear the word of God.
“Selling my business and taking home $100M was the worst decision I ever made,” a well-known entrepreneur once said. I was floored. How could this be?
What does it look like to put God at the center of your business? When we see our workplace as an opportunity to bring hope and life to people that desperately need it, it changes everything. Our job is to live faithfully and obediently wherever He has placed us.
Let me introduce you to Tim. Tim was the ideal model for anyone asking how to be a great car salesman. And he exemplified the two traits I think all business people should have regardless of industry.
Every entrepreneur is custom-created for a purpose. But how, in a world so full of noise and distraction and fear, do we go about staying on (or getting on - let’s be honest) the road we’re called to travel?
We are facing a pandemic of not only mental illness (which is a severe problem) but also an even bigger one of mental wellness. How can soul care serve us in this arena?
At its best, business is both purposeful and profitable, dynamic and gainful, commercial and rewarding. Far from being opposites, good business and good behavior go hand-in-hand, and biblical principles can align with best practices.
If we don’t keep priorities straight, then the idolatry of work can slowly enmesh us. Our souls shrivel, and our perspectives fade as we shift from worshipping the Creator to worshipping the created. That’s when we become workaholics.
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[ Photo by Katie Rodriguez on Unsplash ]
God wants a relationship with you, so it’s not just about solving problems! And, as you deepen your relationship with God through prayer, it becomes easier and easier to know His will for your life and your life and your entrepreneurship.