Virtual Cars for Everyone
Imagine a car being available to you practically
anywhere at any time. Why not create an app for making this dream a reality not
only for yourself but for millions of your customers, assuming that you have the
entrepreneurial drive!
Let us visualize what the customer should get. He taps
on his app, enters the starting location and destination and gets a car to pick
up him up somewhere within 5-30 minutes if he wants. Or he gets the car at a
specified time and date of his choice. He gets a confirmation message soon
after the booking. Another tap and he should be able to talk to the driver of
the assigned car. He gets a frequently updated display showing what the status
of the assigned car is and when it will reach him. Cancellation is easy. Prior
registration makes personalization easy, recording relevant addresses of the
customer, phone numbers, etc. Ideally the system should be able to charge
customers’ credit card, without introducing any security risk.
What is new about this? Most of the features mentioned
above have been made available by different taxi-booking systems. Recently Meru
Cabs announced their “app”, but it turned out to be link to their website! I
would prefer an app, so that all interactive data entry can be done quickly,
irrespective of the quality of mobile data signal the customer gets on his cell.
I don’t mind if the cell phone has to take a few minutes to send the
information over a poor data channel to the server.
The key issues, as I see it, are quality of the human
computer interaction, the number of useful affordances, and the overall
efficiency the user gains by using the tool. I rate simplicity as an important
quality of a Human Computer Interface.
Students who want to program an app for a project in
this area can do it. Other students who want to set up mobile-optimised websites
can also do that. But both these groups
would need to design and implement the back-end that will run on the server.
Servlets running on some cloud infrastructure such as the Google App Engine
would be a good way to start.
I should not forget the entrepreneurially motivated
student who wants to try the business possibilities of this system either in a
company or in a start-up. The rest of this posting is designed for students of
this third category.
What will you give the customer that an airport
taxi-hire service does not give? My answer is: a highly reliable, nation-wide, general
purpose system, offering quick response. It will never say “no vehicle
available” because you want to do a short trip!
Scale is everything here. You might have to start
small, but you must know either you will grow fast to be huge company or will have
to sell out sooner or later! Why is size important? Unless the customer
believes that you will meet his need practically all the time, he will laugh at
the idea of a virtual car. This means to me that system should make a car
available to him 95% of the time within 15 minutes, and 99% of the time within
30 minutes. Such reliable response should cover the whole region in which the
company operates. Not having such demanding requirements would make it easier
and less expensive to build a company, but will keep you out of the big league.
Approximately two million passenger cars were bought in
2012 in India. This suggests that our entrepreneurs should plan for a market of
something like ten million regular customers to be built over a ten year
period. At estimated revenue of Rs 10,000 per customer, we are talking about a
market of Rs 10,000 Crores in the tenth year! On this scale, the company should
be able to provide its customers with an experience superior to that of owning
a chauffeur-driven vehicle.
I am not going to discuss what should go into a
business case at length, but will mention a few key points.
The pleasure of driving one’s own car is very important
to many people. Over a course of time, the Indian road environment will
improve, along with the country’s legal infrastructure and law-enforcement.
There will be logic then in providing for use of self-driven vehicles as an
alternative to the chauffeur driven vehicles. The customer could pick-up/drop
the vehicle at fixed places, or he might even have the vehicle driven to his
door by a company driver. The ability to use either system as required would be
a big attraction to the customer. For an example of a system based on
self-driving, visit http://www.vrtucar.com/
Secondly, you don’t need to buy a huge fleet of cars to
run this operation. The industry has successfully shown that you can work
largely with driver-owned vehicles, arranging bank loans for drivers. This
franchise model leaves the owners of the parent company essentially running an
IT based operation, having the bulk of its employees handling only managerial
responsibility. The exercise of planning out a company of the kind visualized
above should be interesting to management students.
What is most exciting about the virtual car
system? It has potential for job
creation and for improving the quality of life for millions.
Srinivasan Ramani
1 comment:
You might wish to visit this site:
Give up your car!
Post a Comment