 
     The US has a new trend in personal mobility and David Crawford takes a closer look.     
     
US automaker 
     
The latest move comes against the background of the 
     
GM, says its president, Dan Ammann, is now “at the forefront of redefining the future of personal mobility.” He expects the automotive industry to change more in the next five years than it has in the last 50, “and we obviously want to make sure that we’re at the forefront of that change.”
     
GM is putting US$500 million into Lyft – the largest single such direct investment by any US automaker in a ridesharer to date - to boost the expansion of that company. Since its founding in 2012, Lyft has expanded its operations to some 200 US cities and now claims the country’s fastest-growing rideshare operation, with over 100,000 signed-up drivers.
     
This format will continue within the new alliance but the technology that lies behind it will be taking the company further.
     
A GM spokesperson told ITS International: “Lyft’s leadership in the software needed to automate ride matching, routing and payments - matched with our leadership in vehicle connectivity, electrification and autonomous vehicle technology - will be an impressive combination.” Lyft president John Zimmer says that: “We strongly believe that the autonomous vehicle go-to market strategy is through a network, not through individual car ownership.”
     
As a first step, GM has become a preferred provider of short-term use (conventional) vehicles to be made available to Lyft drivers through a national network of rental hubs. The GM spokesperson continued: “We have been setting up the first of these during the first quarter of 2016. We have also been looking at attractive offers to Lyft drivers to enable them to rent vehicles for shorter durations, for instance a week.  
“This will give us an opportunity  to increase the utilisation of our fleet and, at the same time, offer  Lyft drivers that do not have a car the opportunity to get access to one  and generate some income.”
     
The  next, longer-term element in the alliance’ programme is the development  of protocols designed to ensure that drivers and passengers have full  access to GM’s connected 
     
A  central element of OnStar is its automatic crash response, with  built-in sensors reacting to incidents and predicting the severity of  injuries. An SOS message alerts an advisor, who is then connected into  the vehicle and can direct emergency services to the crash location.
     
Other  features include routine roadside assistance, crisis support in the  event of severe weather or disasters, and stolen vehicle assistance -  involving remote ignition blocking and engine slowdown.
     
All  new GM vehicles, across all brands, now come equipped with the 4G LTE  (Long Term Evolution) connectivity to enable in-vehicle Wi-Fi and the  capability to link in up to seven communications devices.  
     
Some  vehicles in the new programme will also offer Apple CarPlay, which  diverts typical smartphone functions into an in-vehicle infotainment  display for voice activation and will be available with short- as well  as longer-term rental. Meanwhile, GM is looking at “more opportunities  to leverage connectivity for both driver and passengers.”
     
One  of these could be OnStar At Your Service, a commercial platform that  connects vehicles with retailers and service providers along their  route; flagging up, for example, discount offers and the opportunity to  make hotel room bookings. The company says that it is still working  through the details.
Lyft  is also talking about joint  mobility offerings that both it and GM will  offer each other’s  customers via “personalised mobility services and  experiences through  their respective channels.” But a spokesperson  declined to spell out  the company’s own plans.
     
With  the introduction of  AVs so firmly in the partnership’s sights, the  company’s drivers are  wondering about their future. GM’s answer is that  “this is about choice  and specific use cases. We believe that there will  be driver assisted  ride-sharing in the future.”
     
Working   to realise this assurance will be the groups of rideshare drivers that   have been springing up across the US to represent this new kind of  road  user. Some are following the model of the small business  association and  negotiating, for example, for membership discounts with  auto-repair and  vehicle maintenance shops. Others are setting  themselves up as labour  unions (in at least one case, as a local branch  of the International  Brotherhood of Teamsters, which claims to be the  strongest union in  North America).
     
As to prospects for extending the partnership outside the US, Lyft has already been on the lookout for opportunities in Europe.
     
   In 2015, an exploratory delegation visited London, as apparently the   most likely candidate city for the company’s expansion outside the US;   but the company told ITS International that a UK launch is not imminent.   GM, too, says it is open in principle to working with some of Lyft’s   international partners, for example in Asia, but is currently focussing   on the US only.
     
None of   the other 11 member companies of the Auto Alliance seem ready to   announce plans as advanced as those of GM, with both ridesharing and AV   deployment on the horizon. A spokesperson for 
 
 Another, for   
     
In    the vehicle sharing arena, however, Ford Motor Credit chose February    2016 to launch a pilot, in Austin, Texas, of a new Credit Link leasing    scheme. This is targeting self-organised groups of between three and  six   people – households, neighbours, friends, work colleagues or  students   who don’t need a vehicle full time, but would like access to  their own   set of wheels.
     
The initiative is the latest in a series emerging under the company’s Smart Mobility Plan, which is focussing on two key areas: 
flexible    vehicle ownership and use, and multimodal urban travel solutions. A    2015 peer-to-peer sharing pilot involved  Ford Credit inviting 14,000  US   and 12,000 London (UK) drivers to sign up to rent their    company-financed vehicles to prescreened drivers for short-term use, to    help offset ownership costs.
     
The    US participants used web-based mobile-accessible software developed  by   rideshare company 
     
Among  the   attractions, users cited access to technologies available in  current   models, including parking assistance and the SYNC  voice-activated   control system which enables hands-free mobile use and  direct calling to   emergency services after an incident.
     
The  choice   for piloting Credit Link fell on Austin because, says  McClelland, it is   “a progressive city with a rich demographic mix. It  has effective  public  transportation, and consumers who use various  mobility options  but may  not need a full vehicle lease to meet their  transportation  needs.” 
     
   
- About the Author: David Crawford has spend 20 years writing about and researching ITS and is a Contributing Editor to ITS International.
 
     
         
         
         
        



