For retailers and brands
Your customer is wondering who's going to put it together.
You can send them to an installer and let them take it from there. Or you can sell them the assembly and we'll get someone out to do it.
Which one is your problem?
Most brands need one, not both.
Send them to an installer
A search box on your product page. Your customer types their ZIP and gets real installers nearby, with ratings and phone numbers. They call whoever they like.
What you have to do
Add it to your page. Your developer will need about five minutes. Then nothing, ever again.
What you never touch
The booking. The money. The installer. Whatever happens next is between them and the customer.
This is you if you don't want to be in the assembly business. You just don't want to lose the sale over it.
Sell the assembly
Add assembly to the checkout, at your price. When the order lands, we put it in front of installers near your customer, and you choose who goes.
What you have to do
Send us the job, by hand or automatically. Pick who does it. Pay them.
What you never do
Hire anybody. Run a crew. Pay us a cut of anything.
This is you if assembly is money you're leaving on the table, and you want to control who turns up at your customer's door.
Some brands do both: the search box before the sale, the assembly service after it. You don't have to.
Sending them to an installer
They shouldn't have to go and Google it.
Someone's looking at a $1,200 basketball hoop and doing the math on whether they own a socket set. If they leave your page to find out who assembles it, they might not come back.
Assembly Pros
4.9 (42) · Liberty, KY
Your fonts. Your color. Not an iframe.
It looks like your website
Your fonts, your colors. It sits in the page rather than in a box bolted onto it.
Nobody nearby? It still helps.
It takes their details and we go and find someone. It never tells your customer “no results” and leaves them there.
It doesn't follow anyone around
No cookies, no tracking across other websites. One less thing to explain to your legal team.
You find out where you're losing people.
Every search is somebody telling you they want this. Each month we show you how many asked, how many picked up the phone, and the places we had nobody to send.
1,204
people searched
340
called an installer
18 places
we had nobody, so we go recruit there
Selling the assembly
You sell it. We find the person who shows up.
Send the job however suits you
Type it in yourself in half a minute, or have your store send it over automatically when an order ships. Start by hand, switch later.
You choose who goes
You see their ratings and their price before you pick. Set a price and let people take it, or let them bid and choose.
You can talk to them
Message the installer directly. They send photos when the job's done. If someone goes quiet, put the job back out with one click.
Pay them how you want
By card right here, or by check if that's how you work. Add or take off money if the job changed, with a reason both sides can see.
Fitness Equipment Assembly
3 installers want this job
Furniture Assembly
Yoder & Sons · done Tuesday · 4 photos
Everything in one place, without leaving the tab.
Selling the assembly · the money
Whatever you charge for it, you keep.
You agree a price with the installer. What you charge your customer is a different number, and it's none of our business. We never see it, and we take no cut of it. You pay us a flat monthly fee for the network, and that's the whole arrangement.
We can only say that because the money for the job never passes through us. It goes from you to the installer.
So what assembly is to your business is your call. Same job, three ways to price it:
Profit center
Charge more than the job costs you. Assembly becomes a margin line of its own, not just a courtesy.
Break even
Pass the cost straight through. A white-glove perk that closes the sale and costs you nothing.
Subsidize
Charge less, or nothing, and eat the difference as a loss-leader that wins the far bigger product order.
We never see any of these numbers and take no cut of them. You pay a flat monthly fee for the network, and the posture is yours to change any time.
And you can skip the 1099s.
Pay an installer $600 or more by check and you owe them a 1099-NEC in January, which means chasing a W-9 first. Pay by card and the card network reports it instead, so that job never reaches your desk. Not tax advice: worth two minutes with your accountant.
Whichever you choose
Don't promise assembly where we can't deliver it
Better to say nothing than to promise something and miss. So before you offer assembly to anybody, you can ask us whether we actually have installers where they live.
Ask us by hand
Send us a list of ZIP codes, or a region, and we'll tell you where we're strong and where we're thin. Useful before you commit to launching assembly in a new state.
Or have your store ask us, automatically
One call to our API, with the customer's ZIP, and you get back a straight yes or no before the page has finished loading. Show the assembly option when we can cover it, hide it when we can't. Your customer never sees an offer we can't keep.
GET /api/v1/coverage?zip=40031&service=Furniture%20Assembly
Authorization: Bearer <your api key>
{ "zip": "40031", "service": "Furniture Assembly", "available": true, "providers": 6 }That's the whole thing. If available is false, don't show the upsell. Full API docs.
Let's talk it through
Tell us what you sell and where you ship it. If we don't have installers in your customers' areas yet, we'll say so rather than sign you up and disappoint you.
We'll walk you through the dashboard, the API, and what a job actually looks like from your customer's side.