Friday, April 20, 2012

4/19 Greenstart Interview

Pitch Slides:
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1aGBpo1izIs35kQdzfjFhOCFZg72akL3CnlxTwrDs7C8/edit




Carey:        Have you ever sat in traffic and looked longingly over at the HOV lane and wished you could be in it? Well, for us, the answer was yes. And what’s the best way to do it? Car pooling.

Tom:          Rideshare 2.0 is RidePal for carpooling.

Carey:        Rideshare 2.0 takes the sting out of rush hour by helping drivers get paid to drive to work while slashing commute times for every one.


CHANGE SLIDE:            (2      PROBLEM)
Tom:          There are over 120 million cars on the road every day in America, polluting the air and causing needless and frustrating traffic gridlock during rush hour.

In Los Angeles, we have over 4 million commuters every day and most of them are driving alone.

That means one person is driving in a car made to hold a at least  four people! Meanwhile 80% of the riding capacity of the road is going to waste.

To battle this phenomenon, cities like Los Angeles have built over 438 miles of HOV lanes, yet they sit empty most of the time because people want the flexibility to come and go as they please and few people want to drive with a complete stranger they have no social connection with.

With long commutes – as so many are in Los Angeles – public transportation is no help either. Because buses and trains transport dozens or hundreds of people, they must make endless stops that make commute times longer than driving alone in a car.

Change slide:               (3      SOLUTION)
Rideshare 2-point-Oh is a web and mobile app that uses crowdsourcing to enable the drivers of smaller vehicles – like cars -- to offer their Open Seats to passengers.

Rideshare 2-point-oh focuses on corporate and government commuters. We create a safe social network for both riders and drivers by validating each user’s identity with their employers.

We also focus on peak rush hour times to provide the most choices for users.

And best of all, we design our routes around HOV lane for faster commutes and Park ‘n Rides for rider convenience and flexibility.


CHANGE SLIDE:
(4      TECHNOLOGY)

The technology consists of a social web application with a real time open seat availability and scheduling capability. You can schedule for time of day you want to leave every morning and the frequency. It also allows for drivers and passengers to check in when they’re beginning and ending their journey.

We will have a payment solution that allows passengers to pay when they reserve a seat. Drivers will get paid on a weekly or monthly basis for the rides they’ve completed.

We’re also in talks with 2 different mobile app developers.

Change Slide:               (5      TEAM)

Tom Pham is the chief commuter and technologist. He’s an SAP enterprise resource planning software architect for 16 years for Fortune 500 companies. This is his fourth startup. My passion is technology and Tom’s son has asthma. Seeing his son’s difficulty breathing because of air quality motivated him to be passionate about making the air cleaner in
Los Angeles and all over the world. Children are the most affected by pollution. If I can help him, maybe I can help other people in the world. I just wanna make a difference.

We met at a UCLA event several months ago. Kept seeing each other and kept coming up with ideas for RideshareLA.

Carey has started 3 businesses and has a background in envrionmental and sustainability issues, including her research firm, Global Brainstorm Research, for which she was the senior research consultant on “An Inconvenient Truth.” She’s worked at PBS and in documentary TV and film for 20 years. In 2005, received the National Philanthropy Award. She’s a member of Tree People and perhaps a little too proudly drives a Prius.

Max is an economist from Northwestern University. He was a Sustainability Analyst at the World Economic Forum. Max worked with some of the world’s leading retail companies, including Nike, Starbucks and Timberland to help measure and reduce their environmental impact and make their operations more socially responsible. Max monitors Rideshare’s compliance with all state and local certification and regulatory requirements, as well as efforts to market our service to utilities and refineries whom we can help to meet those same requirements. He also oversees Rideshare blog and grant writing.

Bach Win is rideshare’s Chief Engineer and UI expert. His company, B-Line Express develops software for NASA and Porsche. Bach and his team of developers created the Rideshare web-based “B” site. Bach lives in Maryland and has seen the success of the sluglines in the Washington, DC / Maryland area and therefore wanted to develop the web app.


Change Slide:     (6      TRACTION)

Finalist UCLA Anderson Knapp Venture Competition  (June 2011) – got 3 months of mentoring . Great experience and the research indicated we needed to do a pivot.

Tried RideshareLA as a peer to peer business model but discovered there were legal problems with that model We did research and found that peer to peer was not profitable based on competitors who had gotten funded. Also, we decided that p2p was a temporary solution to the traffic gridlock and air pollution and didn’t satisfy safety concerns of users. As well as other legal aspects that killed the idea – it becomes a taxi service. Carpool guidelines – have to be heading in the same direction. We’re a Fair Share Model that only covers the cost of commuting so it’s not a profit-driven model and they’re paid on an escrow basis, which prevents it being considered a taxi service. Can’t go out of your way, (PickupPal in Canada got dinged for the taxi law).

We were also pursuing a ride estimator mobile app so college students could invoice their buddies for rides back and forth from college and on other road trips. SMS payment system that would’ve been expanding out to a peer to peer payment system. Became more of a mobile payment app and had too many expenses.

Toward the end of last year, it was an uphill battle and we almost gave up. But then we met Mike Jones (former CEO of MySpace) through UCLA and he said he thought it was a brilliant idea and we should continue.

So then we regrouped, and incorporated into a C-corp and tried again. 


Corporate commuters

Created Site A in J in January and it was a robust social platform
Then met Bach Nyugen (Win), who develops software for NASA and was interested in created the app for us. 

Created Advisory Board this year
Met Glen Hellman (Vistage)
Met Leslie Caplan – sustainability advisor – heads up sustainability for the SF area and she invented the  (Business Model Generation Canvas Class)
David Goldschmidt (StartupWeekend in Chicago)

Tested Vanpool idea – surveyed vanpool passengers and drivers. Passengers loved the idea because of the flexibility but drivers were hesitant because they liked locking their customers into monthly contracts and didn’t want the administrative cost and hassle of trying to sell empty seats. We may return to this model later but at this point, we decided to pivot.

We’re gonna do a Trial Run Launch aiming to do by August 2012


We’re heavily networked and spending a lot of time at startup events to learn the latest trends, technologies and funding sources.

http://tecbruins.org/activities/tca-mentorship
http://www.techcoastangels.com/


Change Slide:               (7      FUTURE PROSPECTS)

Future Prospects

•Pursuing a partnership with Metro to promote our service at Park ‘n Rides

•Currently Metro DC promotes sluglines and we’re trying to get them to promote it here in LA

•Pursuing a partnership with MTA at LAX – we have an in with their sustainability person to set up carpooling for their employees (43,000 people work there)

•Thank you for listening to our presentation.


http://youtu.be/v7WsTeXFAvY

No comments:

Post a Comment