About LawnStarter
LawnStarter is the nation's leading on-demand marketplace for lawn care and outdoor services, with over $100M in annual bookings. We operate across three brands (LawnStarter, Lawn Love, Home Gnome) on a single shared platform, and we've been profitable for two years running. We're expanding beyond lawn care to become the one-stop shop for all home services.
About Product at LawnStarter
Home services is a massive, broken market. For homeowners, getting reliable, fairly priced service is a hassle of phone tag, no-shows, and surprise quotes. For the Pros who do the work, running a business means chasing customers, dead time between jobs, and unpaid admin. LawnStarter is the marketplace that fixes both sides.
We proved the model with lawn care - it works at scale, profitably, across millions of jobs. In the last year we extended it to a second service: pool cleaning, now live in select markets. Getting there meant building the first version of a product that can onboard customers and Pros, match the two sides, get the job done, and handle the exceptions when it doesn't go to plan.
The Role
This is LawnStarter's first Director of Product Management - the leader between the VP of Product and a team of three PMs (and the hires that follow).
The mandate is simple to state and hard to do: ship value across growth, retention, and profitability by building a great product for customers and Pros. Concretely, that means taking us from one profitable-at-scale vertical to two, setting the path from two to n, while still aggressively improving our core lawn service.
What Makes This Role Different
What You'll Own
Problems to Solve
Abstracting one product into a multi-service platform. Every service has different economics, quality signals, and Pro workflows. How do we judge Pro quality when services are nothing alike? Price any service by location and job complexity? Guarantee quality on every job, not just lawns? You'll decide what generalizes and what stays service-specific, then sequence the build to a second profitable vertical - a platform that absorbs that variation instead of forking under it.
Prioritizing across three goals with one capacity. Growth, retention, and profitability all want the roadmap, and engineering capacity is finite - a win on one can cost you on another. You'll own the sequencing and tradeoffs, and say no clearly and often, with reasons people respect.
Building for the agent era. We believe products must now be built to use agents (to move faster and serve customers and Pros better) and to serve agents (so the platform works when the buyer or the worker is an AI). Almost no one has a playbook for this - you'll help write ours.
What Success Looks Like (Year 1)