ianacare gives the 50 million Americans caring for a family member an app to organize helpers, track tasks, and navigate logistics – sold to employers as a productivity-preserving benefit.
ENTRY ANGLES
Employer-sponsored benefits for unpaid caregivers · Geographic expansion of employer model to new markets
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
B2B sales and employer relationship management, Monetization model design for social problem markets
The name ianacare encodes the company's mission: "I am not alone." That framing matters, because the core problem it addresses is one most people handle in isolation.
90% of caregiving happens at home, not in clinical settings. In the US, 50 million people are currently providing care for a family member – someone dealing with illness, disability, injury, or age. The physical and emotional load is substantial, and most caregivers carry it without a coordinated support structure.
ianacare's mobile app gives caregivers a tool to build one. Users assemble a private group – family members, friends, neighbors, colleagues – and coordinate help through it: a grocery run, a meal, a ride, a few hours of relief. The app also surfaces expert-written resources organized by care situation, and maintains a local directory of professional support services covering mental health, legal assistance, financial guidance, and more.
The directory and professional services, as a note in the product makes clear, are fully available to users whose employer has enrolled in ianacare's enterprise program. That detail is where the business model lives.
Employers paying for benefits that have nothing obvious to do with core job functions is an established pattern. Financial wellness programs, mental health support, nutrition coaching – companies fund these because the math works: a distracted, stressed employee is less productive, and the cost of replacing someone is consistently higher than the cost of retaining them.
ianacare follows the same logic into caregiving. With 50 million Americans providing care, and projections suggesting that number will grow to 70 million, roughly one in four workers is managing some caregiving responsibility right now. That affects both the hours available for work and the quality of focus during working hours.
The B2B pivot proved decisive. ianacare launched its employer partnership program in early 2021; within a year, roughly 400,000 people were accessing the service through their employer, with a target of 1 million. In March 2020 the company raised $3M in its first round; the subsequent round brought in $12M – the growth in check size directly tracking the growth in the employer channel.
The specifics of ianacare's employer model may not translate directly to every market, but the underlying audience is large in any geography: people providing unpaid care to family members represent a sizable and underserved segment everywhere.
The practical challenge is finding the monetization bridge – who pays, and for what. The employer channel is one answer. The social problem is clear; the question is which side of the market has the incentive and budget to fund the solution.