Advertorials | Jun 05,2023
Feb 28 , 2026
By Kidist Yidnekachew
A seemingly routine transaction for domestic help exposes broader questions about business ethics. Workers perform minimal tasks before being dismissed for lack of fit. Brokers retain the full fee and denied repayment for the failed services that they provide. While the financial loss is modest, the breach of principle carries greater weight. The case reflects the fragile boundary between trust and exploitation in informal markets.
The weight of a messy house is rarely just about the dirty dishes in the sink or the pile of laundry on the couch. It’s a mental weight that sits on your chest, whispering that you’re falling behind. As someone who has danced with buyer’s remorse more times than I care to admit, I really should have known better. I should have paused, breathed, and evaluated. But after a month of playing a losing game against household chores, logic took a backseat to desperation.
For the past four weeks, I have been living without a housemaid, and to say it has been difficult would be an understatement. You think you’ve finally conquered the kitchen, only for the next mealtime to roll around, leaving you right back where you started scrubbing the same plates and pans.
The kids’ clothes seem to attract stains by some strange law of physics, and the floor, no matter how many times it’s swept, is never truly clean. My focus at work vanished. Every time I sat down to be productive, my mind drifted to the mess around me. I was exhausted, burnt out, and searching for an exit strategy.
So, when a delala (broker) called to tell me he had found a maid, I didn’t just hear a service offer, I heard a lifeline. I was so eager to reclaim my time and sanity that I ignored my cautious instincts.
When she arrived, she seemed perfectly fine at first glance. Quiet, eager, we quickly settled on a salary. I felt a massive wave of relief. Finally, I thought, I can breathe again. But that relief lasted all of twenty minutes.
The reality hit the moment we started working. It became immediately clear that she had no idea what she was doing. I don’t mind teaching someone the ropes, but I am in a season of life where I have zero “extra” energy. I needed a helper, not a student. To make matters worse, she dropped the bombshell that she was already in the process of going abroad. Any time and effort I spent training her would be wasted; she’d be gone before she even learned where the detergent was kept.
Communication is the bedrock of any working relationship, but here, it was nonexistent. She spoke very little Amharic, and I found myself gesturing like a mime just to explain simple tasks. Exhausting barely covers it. Within thirty minutes, I realized this wasn’t going to work.
I called the broker back. “Take her back,” I said. “This isn’t a match.”
Now the story takes a turn into the frustrating world of unprofessional business. Before she arrived, I had already paid the broker’s fee, though I had withheld a small portion to pay later. Fairly, I told the broker to pay her something from the money I’d already sent. She had washed a few dishes and swept the floor.
The broker promised he would find me someone else. Two days passed. Silence.
In the meantime, another broker reached out with a different candidate. Sensing that the first guy was dragging his feet, I called him and asked for my money back. His response? A flat “no.” No refunds. Only a replacement.
I was livid. There is a fundamental difference between a product and a service that many in this industry seem to ignore. If I buy a bag of flour and open it, I understand why I can’t return it. But this isn’t a product with an expiry date or a “broken seal” policy. This is a service. If the service isn’t rendered, if the “product” leaves the house within minutes because it wasn’t a fit, the money should follow the person out the door.
What stung most was the lack of foresight. I had gone out of my way to connect this broker with several neighbors also looking for help. I was trying to build a bridge, thinking we were entering a mutually beneficial relationship. But he chose a one-time fee over long-term reputation. Apparently, a few thousand birr mattered more than integrity or future business.
When I told my husband, his reaction was: “You shouldn’t have paid him in such a hurry.”
He was right, of course. But at that moment, the broker was hovering, expecting payment, and I wanted the transaction to be over so I could get on with my life. I didn’t walk in expecting to be cheated. I believe business should operate on principles and a certain level of professional grace.
The money isn’t the main issue; it’s the principle. He didn’t have the right to keep that money for thirty minutes of “work” that ended in failure. Still, as much as I want to blame him, I have to look in the mirror.
This ordeal was a masterclass in the dangers of desperation. I let exhaustion cloud my judgment, leading me to make a “fast” decision rather than a “right” one. I ignored the red flags because I wanted the problem to disappear instantly.
Ultimately, I’ve had to accept that part of this mistake is on me. I agreed to the terms in a hurry and, in doing so, handed over my leverage. It’s a bitter pill, but a necessary one. This experience reminded me that integrity is a rare currency in business, and you shouldn’t assume everyone trades in it. Moving forward, I’ll take my husband’s advice: I’ll slow down, vet more thoroughly, and never let the chaos of a messy kitchen talk me into a bad deal again.
PUBLISHED ON
Feb 28,2026 [ VOL
26 , NO
1348]
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