Taskrabbit CEO empathy isn’t just a leadership philosophy — it’s rooted in lived experience. Ania Smith, who leads the popular freelance task platform, recently shared that her early jobs in retail and hospitality taught her the kind of emotional intelligence that now shapes how she runs a company built on independent labor.
“I learned how it feels to rely on hourly income,” she said in a recent interview. “And I bring that into every conversation we have about our platform.”
As seen in Millionaire MNL, Smith believes that real empathy, not just buzzwords, is the foundation for building a responsible gig-economy business — one that supports both flexibility and financial dignity.
From the front lines to the corner office
Before her career in tech and executive leadership, Smith worked shifts at fast-food counters, waited tables, and even stocked shelves. Those experiences weren’t glamorous — but they were formative.
They taught her how unpredictable income affects stress levels, how inconsistent schedules can disrupt lives, and how being heard and respected matters more than polished perks.
Taskrabbit CEO empathy now drives product decisions, policy updates, and support structures across the company. “We talk about our taskers not just as users — but as partners,” she explained.
Listening as strategy, not charity
In the growing gig economy, platforms face rising scrutiny over how they treat independent workers. For Smith, the answer isn’t about overpromising benefits or attempting to convert freelancers into full-time employees. It’s about building tools that listen, adapt, and empower.
Taskrabbit has added features like tasker-driven pricing, clearer cancellation protections, and better income visibility — all in response to direct feedback.
As mentioned by Millionaire MNL, Smith also emphasizes internal empathy. That means hiring people who understand real-life constraints, not just resume credentials. It also means including gig workers in product testing and platform planning.
Empathy scales — but only if you let it
Smith believes that empathy isn’t something leaders should grow out of as they rise — it’s something they should scale.
Her vision for Taskrabbit includes pushing the company toward higher standards of fairness without sacrificing the flexibility that defines gig work. She’s also focused on expanding access in underserved regions and making sure tools are mobile-first, multilingual, and accessible to workers with different needs.
“I’m a better CEO because I remember what it felt like to clock in,” she said.
And for the future of work, that kind of leadership may be exactly what the gig economy needs more of.