We have been using Zenefits for a couple months now and I have to say I am incredibly impressed. They are lightning-fast on customer support and their onboarding for new employees is super simple. They have saved me many hours and at least part of one tree.
I saw the Zenefits guy at a college talk recently, and I loved his perspective, which was diametrically opposite to silicon valley hype. His take was, find an "unsexy" problem and build your startup on that, because the chances that you're solving a real problem that real people encounter is much higher. Glad to see it's working out for him!
We've also been using Zenefits for a while now and it's amazing. Let's just say I have a lot less headaches to worry about and I can focus on more important things.<p>Parker and team are killing it. This is going to really disrupt insurance agencies.
I'm glad to see they're rolling out all over the US. I really wanted to use them when I first heard about them but couldn't. It looks like I still have to wait until 2014 until they support a small business (i.e. < 20 employees) like mine, but I'm glad to hear they're on track to handle it.<p>Now the next question: who is going to buy them, how long will it take, and when they are finally purchased will they be torn apart by the buyer?
My understanding is that Indinero [<a href="http://indinero.com" rel="nofollow">http://indinero.com</a>] is a superset of this, with a focus on accounting. Or are the two complementary?