Because Home Services Should be Better for
System Structure
Operating System
The system that runs everything your property needs.
What this means
Cohos is not a single service and not a directory of providers. It functions as the operating system for property services.
An operating system does not perform the work itself. It organizes, coordinates, standardizes, and controls how work is planned, executed, documented, and reviewed.
Cohos does the same for homes and properties.
Why this model exists
Home services are fragmented by design.
-
Each job is treated as a one-off.
-
Each provider starts from scratch.
-
Each estimate resets context.
-
Each repair ignores history.
This fragmentation creates higher costs, inconsistent outcomes, and constant friction for property owners.
Cohos exists to replace fragmentation with structure.
What the system actually controls
The Cohos operating system governs:
-
How properties are captured and understood
-
How scope is defined before work begins
-
How services are routed and coordinated
-
How pricing becomes comparable
-
How work is documented and verified
-
How history is preserved over time
Providers operate inside this system rather than outside of it.
What Cohos is not
Cohos is not a marketplace that simply connects people.
-
It does not rely on reviews alone to manage quality.
-
It does not leave scope definition to individual contractors.
-
It does not reset knowledge with each new job.
Those models fail at scale.
Why this matters long term
Once a property lives inside an operating system, switching away becomes costly.
History, measurements, materials, and planning intelligence accumulate over time. That information does not transfer easily elsewhere.
This creates long-term retention without lock-in tactics.
Summary
Cohos replaces disconnected home services with a structured operating layer that makes property work predictable, repeatable, and accountable.
_edited_edited.png)