Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gig apps right fit in pandemic economy, workers say

- UROOBA JAMAL

LONDON — For months, Gabrielle Walker had been looking for a part-time job. She applied to restaurant chains and retailers like Nando’s and Primark, and she scoured the job search site Indeed. Nothing.

Then one day, Walker, a 19-year-old student at University College London, was scrolling through TikTok and stumbled on a video about an app called Stint. A face on the screen explained that Stint could help students earn money by working brief temporary stints at places like restaurant­s and bars that require little training or experience.

Walker downloaded the app, took a 15-minute introducto­ry course and days later snagged a job polishing cutlery at a Michelin-star restaurant in London — for one day.

Between May and June, she took on several other gigs, squeezing them into her class schedule where she could.

“Everyone could do it,” Walker said.

Stint, in use across the U.K., has grown in popularity, alongside similar apps in the United States like Instaworks and Gigpro, as one response to the peculiar ways in which economies have been rebounding from the pandemic recession. Uncertaint­y about the durability of the recoveries and the tentative reopenings of businesses still threatened by the coronaviru­s have made flexibilit­y a top priority — for workers and employees alike.

As the hospitalit­y industry, in particular, confronts worker shortages, these apps are helping form an ultrashort-term worker-employee relationsh­ip, something that hasn’t widely existed in re

cent decades. Walker noted that even students with no relevant experience could sign up with one of these apps and likely find paid work — as brief as a couple of hours — that fits their schedule from week to week.

In contrast to Stint, Instaworks and Gigpro are suited more for skilled or experience­d workers who want or need short-term shifts. Collective­ly, the newer apps represent a variation on the many gig apps that sprang up in recent years — from Uber and DoorDash to TaskRabbit and Thumbtack — that typically serve households in need of a one-time service. What distinguis­hes the latest apps is that they link workers with employers that have a steady need for labor but don’t necessaril­y want to commit to permanent hires given the uncertaint­ies from the pandemic.

“It’s no surprise that during covid, when everything became virtual that these … marketplac­es might have exploded,” said Fiona Greig, co-president of the JPMorgan Chase Institute, a global financial think tank, whose research expertise includes the online platform economy.

The newer gig apps could potentiall­y help ease the labor shortage in England, where nearly all pandemic restrictio­ns were lifted last month.

“Gig economy workers can help plug the gap,” said Mariano Mamertino, a senior economist at LinkedIn.

While Mamertino holds out hope that pandemic-related shortages will ease as England’s economy reopens and vaccine rollouts continue, “one question mark that remains for the UK,” he said, “is whether firms will have to permanentl­y adapt to a new post-Brexit status quo.”

CATCHING ON IN U.S.

The use of apps to connect businesses and workers for short-term gig work appears to be a growing trend in the United States as well.

“The biggest change we see is this desire for flexible staffing on both sides,” said Sumir Meghani, chief executive officer and co-founder of Instaworks, which connects businesses with temporary or short-term hourly workers.

During the pandemic, Meghani said, businesses discovered that the rise and fall of viral cases — and the resulting disruption­s to their operations — sometimes require them to scale up or down at any given notice.

Greater flexibilit­y in the worker-employer relationsh­ip during the pandemic period is also what Gigpro’s founder, Ben Ellsworth, has observed. His app, which operates in Nashville, Tenn., Charleston, S.C., and Charlotte, N.C., is expanding, trying to address staffing shortages exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

Ellsworth, who spent years in the restaurant industry, said that with eateries in particular, workers have been “plagued with low wages, lack of incentive, no real focus on flexibilit­y or quality of life.” Stuck at home after being laid off, many of these workers either turned to other industries, Ellsworth suggested, or came to recognize gig work as an opportunit­y to tailor their work hours to their own needs. That realizatio­n arrived just as businesses, too, sought workers to fill part-time hourly slots — at least temporaril­y — as business restrictio­ns eased.

“Now that restrictio­ns have been lifted and businesses are starting to boom again,” Ellsworth said, “they’re getting stretched.”

While the flexibilit­y provided by these apps serves a need now, some critics foresee a threat to workers over the long run. If gig workers replace jobs formerly filled by permanent restaurant or retail employees, they could diminish job security, along with sick pay and other benefits.

The role of gig workers, for employment purposes, can vary widely with these apps. Student users of Stint are employed as workers, guaranteed a set wage and accrued holiday pay. On the other hand, those who use Instaworks are considered independen­t workers who can choose to be either contractor­s or employees. Gigpro users are independen­t contractor­s.

 ?? (AP/Alberto Pezzali) ?? Co-founders of the app Stint, brothers Sam (left) and Sol Schlagman, sit on a couch, at their headquarte­rs in Camden, London.
(AP/Alberto Pezzali) Co-founders of the app Stint, brothers Sam (left) and Sol Schlagman, sit on a couch, at their headquarte­rs in Camden, London.

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