Wow. Limited release, to Missouri? I didn't think we got <i>anything</i> first. I expect several people in my family will try this out.<p>Off the top of my head, some challenges:<p><i>Insurance</i> Equipment can be rendered unusable in so many ways. It's not even in the same ballpark as an Airbnb guest ruining the carpet. You've <i>got</i> to have insurance for this. Who pays? How much? Does anyone even want to offer insurance to this market? The "About" page mentions verification, which in theory might reduce EquipmentShare's risk, but I wonder. It <i>won't</i> be the same as insurance sold to existing rental companies. I doubt that a standard contractor's worksite insurance plan covers this either.<p><i>Maintenance</i> Most of the equipment pictured on the website requires <i>daily</i> maintenance by a qualified operator or mechanic. Sure, the interval gets stretched, but that's usually by the owner or her agents, so they get what's coming to them. I understand that this is the primary headache for equipment rental places, but they are better able to deal with it than an individual contractor would be, and typically they know their customers pretty well before they e.g. rent a Bobcat for a month.<p><i>Mobilization</i> If it fits in the back of a pickup, this probably won't be a problem. Lots of stuff doesn't. Who is hauling the equipment? When? Is it a separate fee? Does the hauler have insurance that will cover the value of the equipment? (Is that the sort of thing that we should leave to reviews?)<p><i>Fees per what?</i> Lots of stuff is fine to rent by the day. If it has an engine, however, it's often better to rent by the operating hour. If the lessee just wants to use something for an hour a day, however, minimum fees might be appropriate. This could get complex.<p><i>Find the right model for older equipment</i> With old enough heavy equipment, operating costs swamp equipment value. That is, if you have an old bulldozer sitting out in a field, it's costing you nothing. (The capital is fully depreciated.) If you then use it for a month, you're going to have to replace all the many filters a couple of times, run a couple of buckets of oil through it a day, fix all the dry-rotted hydraulic hoses, locate and repair some seals, replace both batteries, locate and fix clogged grease fittings, and then pray that nothing big like a pump or a turbo goes out. If this stuff is the lessor's responsibility, the rental fee will need to be higher than one might expect. If it's the lessee's, it won't get done, the machine will be ready for the scrapyard after a week, and one might expect lawsuits. The right model <i>might</i> be "don't allow old junk", but this is an area where this service can differentiate itself from existing equipment rental, so maybe not.<p>Actually now that I think about it, this service might be better for specialty tools like hammerdrills and scaffolding than it would be for motorized equipment like that pictured on the landing page. Fewer details, and less money on the line in case of disaster. One suggestion I would definitely make would be to sign up existing rental companies and equipment dealers (perhaps through a separate website if you don't want to confuse contractors). They have a lot of existing inventory and will view this as another sales channel.