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Avego: How To Take Cars off the Road, Now?

By Paul Smith


In our still car dominated society, traffic is, for the moment, a necessary evil. Sure, mass transit options are increasing in some cities, and numerous efforts are making bicycle commuting more amenable and doable. But rush hour is still a twice daily reality for most of us.

What can be done to reduce traffic, right now, at no additional cost and disruption to our current transportation infrastructure?

Avego is a viable option that merits attention.

What Avego does is brilliant: Remove cars from the road by enabling real time ride sharing. In a move that behavior change advocates would do well to take note of, Avego goes where people already are: their smartphones. Reducing the number of new steps needed to take a new action, via a familiar platform, is wise.

It works like this: A driver specifies the route they’ll be driving, via Avego’s iPhone app. Would be passengers request a ride, specifying their location, and can use either an iPhone or any web enabled phone. Drivers who are going along this route are notified of an interested rider. Avego calculates how much the rider should be charged to compensate the driver. When both agree to the ride, the passenger is directed to a convenient pick up location, and both are given a unique PIN number in order to verify identity of the rider.

Further leveraging modern day smartphone capability, the passenger gets real-time passenger information (RTPI) so that they know exactly how long to expect their driver to be. In another move familiar and now intuitive to people, both rider and driver can rate each other 1-5 stars. If either gives a 1 star, they’ll never be matched up again. I’m curious when/if this also bears on whether they are allowed to be a part of the Avego system overall?

Other useful features that will help Avego be of interest to a broader population are: each party receives a profile of the other, including photo and rating; customers can choose only to travel with people they already know and trust, the system even includes audio cues for drivers, so they can focus on driving.

As with any such tool, it takes a critical mass using it to be of benefit. As Avego puts it,

This is why we are working with partners to target specific communities where we can grow the network more quickly. If you are interested in developing a community of users in your area or organization, please let us know at info@avego.com

It’s a promising service, but I’m curious where they make their money. They take 15% of each rider fee, but that mostly goes to covering expenses. And if user fees don't prove sufficient, will local municipalities pay to support this service?

Watch Avego in action:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P58Ug6JpdRU&feature=player_embedded

Readers: Would you use such a service? If not, what would need to change? What other immediately impactful ways do you see to reduce traffic in your part of the world?

Paul Smith is a sustainable business innovator, the founder of GreenSmith Consulting, and has an MBA in Sustainable Management from Presidio Graduate School in San Francisco. He creates interest in, conversations about, and business for green (and greening) companies, via social media marketing.

Paul Smith is a sustainable business innovator, the founder of GreenSmith Consulting, and has an MBA in Sustainable Management from Presidio Graduate School in San Francisco. He creates interest in, conversations about, and business for green (and greening) companies, via social media marketing. || ==> For more, see GreenSmithConsulting.com

Read more stories by Paul Smith