AI matching explained
How Remdo AI matching works in the United States
Remdo AI-assisted matching reads the task description and provider service descriptions for meaning, then combines that relevance with country rules, location, and current availability. It ranks plausible options; it does not automatically hire or assign anyone.
- Audience
- both
- Country
- United States
- Updated
Meaning comes before a fixed tag
A customer can describe the desired outcome in ordinary language. Remdo compares that description with what providers say they do, rather than requiring the customer to know the perfect category name.
This helps separate similar words with different intent, but the quality of the result still depends on clear request and profile information.
Location and availability narrow the result
A semantically relevant provider may still be impractical if unavailable, outside the active country, or too far from the arrival point. Remdo uses these additional signals before showing local options.
If no suitable provider is found at the first distance, the search can expand rather than presenting unrelated accounts immediately.
People remain responsible for the decision
The customer chooses who to contact. The provider chooses whether to answer. Both sides confirm legality, practicality, scope, price, timing, and direct payment.
Matching should be treated as discovery support, not a guarantee of quality, licensing, availability, or a completed agreement.
Questions
Is matching based only on keywords?
No. The matching flow is designed to compare meaning, while also using location, availability, and current service rules.
Can AI approve a provider for regulated work?
No. AI relevance does not replace licenses, permits, insurance, credentials, or the judgment of either party.
Describe a local task
Use the current Remdo flow for your active country. Availability depends on real provider profiles and current market settings.