Meet the man behind Innclusive, a response to AirBnb's discrimination problem
For all of its insistence that it’s committed to giving back to the black community, Airbnb can’t quite shake its reputation for having something of a problem when it comes to its users discriminating against minorities.
The story, as #AirbnbWhileBlack will tell you, is almost always the same. A person of color will log on to the service in search of a place to stay, find an apartment they’re interested in renting, book said apartment, and then suddenly have their booking canceled. That’s what happened to Rohan Gilkes, an entrepreneur originally from Barbados, earlier this year while he was searching for a cabin in Idaho to stay in while visiting friends.
After repeatedly trying to book the cabin at different times during different weeks and being turned away, Gilkes asked a white friend to try his luck. The friend, Gilkes told me, was approved for a stay immediately with no problems.
Rather than merely filing a complaint with Airbnb about his inexplicable rejection, Gilkes decided to turn his experience with the service into a business of his own: Innclusive, a homesharing site Gilkes says makes a point of welcoming people of color and other minorities that have experienced discrimination on Airbnb.
I spoke with Gilkes recently about his experience with Airbnb and how he wants Innclusive to become a service that makes inclusion and diversity integral parts of its business model. Gilkes and his team said they plan to launch Innclusive in the next six to eight weeks.
This conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.
Talk to me about trying to book that cabin in Idaho. What happened when you finally got a hold of someone from Airbnb?
An Airbnb rep explained to me that unless something had happened that was completely transparent, like using the N-word or something like that, there was no way to prove whether or not race was a factor. They told me that there could be a variety of reasons why [the woman] didn’t accept me. They didn’t do anything other than distance themselves from the possibility that race factored into why I was declined.
They ended the conversation by saying that they were going to reach out to me with a followup within a few days. I waited two weeks and nothing. No response, nothing. So I wrote about what happened to me and posted it to social media. The day after the story began to pick up, Airbnb called me. Even though I appreciated the call, it felt disingenuous for obvious reasons.