With IPO due, Uber aims to be 'Amazon of transportation'
Uber, the ridesharing
behemoth set to launch a stock offering soon, is aiming beyond sharing car
rides to becoming the "Amazon of transportation" in a future where
people share instead of owning vehicles.
Uber laid out its vision
of a transformed world of personal mobility as it steered toward a keenly
anticipated stock market debut that will follow an initial public offering of
shares by U.S. rideshare rival Lyft.
"Cars really were,
for us, a kind of starting place," said transportation policy and research
chief Andrew Salzberg at an Uber media event in Santa Monica, California.
"Once we've built this platform for mobility there are a whole host of
business lines we can build beyond that."
The Southern California
beach city was teeming with electric scooters and bicycles from Uber and rivals
that may be checked out with a smartphone app.
"The idea that every
time you walk outside there is this electric, fun-to-ride vehicle waiting to
take you to your next destination is really incredible," said Nick Foley,
head of product for Jump, the electric bike startup acquired by Uber.
"It's more than just
an app to book a bike; it's an app where you can have reliable micro mobility
booking or a could book a car if the weather isn't nice."
Foley believed that a
shift to mobility as a smartphone-summoned-service will alter lifestyles as
dramatically as did the mass market debut of the automobile.
Combining electric motors
with light-weight scooters or bicycles, and having them on streets to be used
on demand, provides an ideal method of getting around in traffic-troubled
cities, according to Uber.
Electric bicycles and
scooters can get people efficiently to destinations in congested downtowns,
where they can switch to public transit or car ride sharing at their
convenience.
Uber's effort to be an
all-encompassing platform for getting around includes adding e-scooter rival
Lime and city transit services to its smartphone application, along with
improving features designed to get people to travel together instead of riding
solo.
The California-based
startup's collaboration with cities includes sharing anonymous traffic flow
data with officials in charge of public transit, bicycle lanes, parking and
road planning.
Uber is also integrating
transit schedules into its app, and will soon add a way to pay fares as well.
"We can't really be
the Amazon for transportation without the biggest mode of transportation out
there, which is public transport," said Uber transit team leader David
Reich.
"The vision is to be
an all-in-one app for all your transportation needs."
If all goes to plan,
commuters could ride an e-scooter to a transit station, take a train then grab
an e-bike, ride share or e-scooter at the arriving station to complete a
journey.
Uber chief executive Dara
Khosrowshahi has made a priority of working with transit agencies, according to
Reich.
Jump has leapt into 16
U.S. cities, and planned to expand internationally this year beginning in
Europe, according to founder and chief executive Ryan Rzepecki.
"I think we are in
year zero of a 10-year, mega-cultural shift," Rzepecki said.
E-scooters and dockless
bikes arriving on streets of US cities have caused complaints, safety concerns,
and the need for laws to reign in reckless riding.
"For as much cultural
change we have been seeing in cities, I think the pushback has been incredibly
low," Rzepecki said, however.
He was excited to get Jump
into Europe, where he felt cities were more inclined to be designed with
bicycling in mind.
Uber is also taking to the
sky with an Elevate project to have electric aircraft carry people between
"skyports," taking off and landing vertically.
Director of vehicle
systems engineering Mark Moore, who spent decades at NASA, joined Uber a little
more than two years ago.
"We are one of the
very big, bold bets that is coming up with a whole new choice of transportation
in cities faced with gridlock really grinding them to a halt," Moore said
of Elevate.
He expected experimental
flights next year, with Uber putting Elevate aircraft into service in Dallas,
Los Angeles, and a soon-to-be revealed third U.S. city by 2023, pledging to
make this an affordable travel option.
"We have zero
interest in doing this for the elites," Moore said. "This is all
about designing a nodal transport system that meets the needs of cities."
Uber's platform moves cargo as well as people, with a "Freight" service that connects truckers with shippers in a way similar to how drivers connect with people seeking rides.
Uber is also seeing
growing success with an "Eats" service that lets drivers make money
delivering meals ordered from restaurants.
Uber is the largest and
most prominent of the "sharing economy" startups that are on the cusp
of transforming several industries, and its IPO could be a milestone for the
trend.
"When Uber goes
public it will be a vote of confidence on the sharing economy but also a vote
confidence on the company," said New York University professor Arun
Sundararajan.
Source : https://japantoday.com/category/business/with-ipo-due-uber-aims-to-be-'amazon-of-transportation'
Source: https://japantoday.com/category/business/with-ipo-due-uber-aims-to-be-'amazon-of-transportation'