Science

Canadian app Zootly is an Uber-style booking service for movers

Canadian-designed moving app Zootly has been compared to Uber, but unlike the ride-sharing app, Zootly doesn't bypass existing companies but collects them under one umbrella, much like a dispatch or booking service for movers.

Free app connects New Yorkers with moving companies that have excess capacity

New Moving Company App

9 years ago
Duration 3:54
Zootly, a new app with a technical base in Canada, helps users connect with moving companies

Two years ago, when New York entrepreneur Rudy Callegari was looking to move his brother's couch, he picked up his phone and searched for an app that would help him do that. When he came up empty, he sensed an opportunity.

"I naively thought two years ago there was an app for everything," he said. "Unfortunately, or maybe fortunately for me, a lot of the industries that are not sexy haven't been touched yet."

Two years later, his idea evolved into Zootly, an app designed to streamline the search for movers. Users tell the app how much stuff they need to move and when, and Zootly matches them with a moving company that is available at that time and gives them an estimate of how much the move will cost.

Users don't have to book weeks in advance and can track the moving truck on the app.

The app is free, and Zootly collects 25% of the moving costs from the movers.

I wouldn't call it an industry ripe for disruption. It was an industry ripe for help.-  Rudy Callegari, founder of moving app Zootly

Zootly is often compared to Uber, but unlike the ride-sharing app, Zootly doesn't bypass existing companies in the industry but collects them under one umbrella, much like a dispatch or booking service. 

It vets the companies, making sure they are licensed and insured and have positive customer reviews, and includes only those that have met its criteria.

Callegari says many moving companies have excess capacity and empty trucks on the road, and the app helps fill those gaps.

Zootly co-founder and president Rudy Callegari, right, sits on his brother's old couch, which helped inspire the idea for the app. It's now in the Zootly office in Manhattan as a reminder of where the company started. (Steven D'Souza/CBC)

"I wouldn't call it an industry ripe for disruption. It was an industry ripe for help, and that's where we come in," Callegari said.

There are competing apps that offer similar services, some of which predate Zootly, such as Move Advisor, MyMove and Lugg, as well as a slew of other apps that help with the packing and planning part of a move.

Canadian connection

One thing that sets Zootly apart is its Canadian connection. The CEO, George Colwell, is Canadian, as are a number of its major investors. The company headquarters are in New York, but most of the development and technical work on the app is done in Kitchener, Ont., where about half the staff work. 

Colwell says he has an easy time selling the Canadian connection to investors south of the border.

"When you're talking to investment banks here, when you're talking to people in the tech sector, you don't have to explain Kitchener-Waterloo to them. They get it. They know it's Canada's Silicon Valley," he said.

So far, Zootly has signed up 41 moving companies in the New York area, and the company plans to expand to other U.S. and Canadian cities later this year. The company says of the roughly 500 movers registered in New York state, only 137 meet Zootly's criteria to be included in the app. 

Mitchell Newman is president of Katz Moving, which recently joined Zootly. He says Zootly's vetting process helps counter the bad reputation that the moving industry has acquired over the years.

Moving companies like Schleppers must pass a screening process to get on the Zootly app. That includes making sure they are licensed and insured and having positive reviews from customers. (Steven D'Souza/CBC)

"Moving companies have a credibility issue," Newman said from his office in Queens. "Too many people have had a bad experience with a moving company."

Currently, he gets about 15 per cent of his jobs from the app, and that number is growing, he said. Newman says he's seen the downtime for his crews decrease because of the jobs they're receiving through Zootly

"When you can get some help on the marketing side, it's all about volume. It's all about doing more work. Its all about keeping the trucks busy," he said.

The challenge, he says, is that his competitors are also on the app, so he still has to find a way to stand out.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Steven D'Souza

Co-host, The Fifth Estate

Steven D'Souza is a co-host with The Fifth Estate. Previously he was CBC's correspondent in New York covering two U.S. Presidential campaigns and travelling around the U.S. covering everything from protests to natural disasters to mass shootings. He won a Canadian Screen Award for coverage of the protests around the death of George Floyd. He's reported internationally from Rome, Israel and Brazil.