A lot of people like buying furniture from Ikea because it's stylish, functional and affordable. The only problem is the purchase usually comes ready to assemble.
The task of transforming a tightly-packed, cardboard-sheathed slab of parts and hardware into a six-drawer dresser or a daybed with storage space often involves spending hours sitting on the floor trying to decipher diagrams in a wordless instruction manual while your spouse is saying, "Not that round thingy, the other round thingy."
That's when — for the sake of your marriage and your sanity — you might want to call someone like Molly McGee, a master freelance furniture assembler.
The Minneapolis resident's motto might be "Have Allen wrench, will travel." In the past year, McGee has been making a living in the gig economy by going to people's homes to put together Ikea furniture.
After hundreds of jobs assembling desks, beds, dressers, shelves and closet organizers sold by the Swedish home goods retailer, McGee may not even need to look at the instructions.
"I can do that one in my sleep," she said of the Swedish retailer's Malm two-drawer chest. "I get into this flow state."
McGee, 32, has built furniture for college kids in new apartments and seniors downsizing into condos, for immigrants and refugee families as well as suburbanites in multimillion-dollar homes. Apparently, love for Swedish design is as universal as dread-of-assembly angst.
"My biggest commodity is saving strife and anger and frustration," McGee said.