The campaign, which runs through August 31, 2026, arrives during a summer defined by the U.S. 250th anniversary and the global spotlight of the FIFA World Cup. For Wait4me co-founder and CEO Karen Ahrens, the high-visibility placement is a calculated move to signal market scale. "We didn't come to Times Square to introduce ourselves," Ahrens said. "We came to declare our position as the first time broker in an economy where human time is the most valuable currency."
As AI reshapes traditional employment, Wait4me operates a two-sided marketplace connecting busy professionals and parents with local assistants who manage physical tasks. Co-founder Chris Gordon views the platform as a necessary evolution, arguing that real-world presence is becoming the scarcest resource on Earth. By partnering with Ayo & Teo, who are currently pivoting toward creative ownership and entrepreneurship, the company aims to frame personal assistance not as a luxury for the elite, but as an accessible tool for individual agency. The duo views the collaboration as a cornerstone of their own "Phase 2," a period they describe as a transition toward legacy building and high-level creative autonomy.





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