Not all marketplaces are built the same.
If you’re building a platform for services — not products — you’re playing a different game. The buying behaviour, expectations, and operational needs are completely unique.
Here’s what makes service marketplaces different, and how to build one that people actually want to use.
1. It’s not about inventory — it’s about availability
With product marketplaces, supply is often ready to ship. But in services, the inventory is someone’s time.
That changes everything:
- You need real-time calendars or availability settings
- Double-bookings = instant loss of trust
- Time zones, cancellations, and buffers matter
Make it easy for buyers to see when someone’s available and book instantly — or request a time seamlessly.
2. Trust matters even more
Buying a product online can feel low-risk. Booking a stranger for a haircut, dog walk, or business consultation? That’s personal.
You’ll need to build trust through:
- Verified profiles
- Reviews and testimonials
- Transparent pricing and clear service descriptions
- Strong communication flows
Service marketplaces win when people feel confident before they book.
3. Communication is part of the product
In service marketplaces, the experience starts before the service does.
Make sure:
- Messaging is smooth and easy
- Notifications and reminders are clear
- Expectations are set (and met)
Don’t let a great service provider lose a customer because of confusing or clunky comms.
4. Payments get trickier
With services, timing matters:
- Do you charge upfront or after the service?
- How do you handle cancellations or disputes?
- What if the service is recurring?
Your payment system needs to match the flow of real-world service delivery. Flexibility is key.
5. Supply-side experience is everything
In services, your providers are the product.
Make sure they’re supported with:
- Simple onboarding
- Control over pricing and availability
- Insights into their performance
- Tools that save time, not create more admin
If your supply side isn’t happy, your marketplace won’t grow.
Final thoughts
Service marketplaces are fundamentally different — and better tech alone won’t solve the challenges. What works for products won’t always translate to services.
At Markko, we’ve designed our platform to handle the nuances of service-based businesses — from availability to trust, communication to payouts.
If you’re building a service marketplace, get in touch. We’ll help you launch faster, with fewer compromises.