One session of 
     
In opening the session on putting MaaS ideas into practice, Hans Arby, chief executive of UbiGo, told the conference that, “MaaS can mean different things to different people. This is why we decided to run MaaS under real conditions and launch the Gothenburg pilot scheme in 2013.”
     
The trial involved 70 households paying €130/month for 6 months with participants agreeing that 20 cars could be put into storage. More than 12,000 bookings/transactions took place during the trial and there were no drop-outs.
     
According to Arby, convenience was seen as the main benefit and the “reason that people wanted to carry on”. Money and the environment were important but it was the convenience of MaaS that people liked, he said, adding: “What we really need is government support for third-party on-selling of public transport tickets,” 
     
He sees the way forward, which includes further planned trials in Stockholm, as a staged process with the law-makers.
     
Right now, we are on the bottom rung with “no integration and single, separate services,” he said. The next step is the “integration of information via multimodal travel planners and better pricing info.” After that, the market should look at “integration,” of both the “payment process and the contractual” side of things where operators are going to need to “bundle” their services and offer subscriptions. Finally, Arby hopes that the market can get to a position where there is proper “policy integration, good governance” and a high level of public/private co-operation enabled by the right sort of legislation.
 
Arby’s co-speaker, Adam Laurell, a consultant with Samtrafiken, sees  this shared responsibility as essential. The market needs a common  vision in government and on the ground, he said. We are all about  “re-defining public transport. In the future, public transport has to  equal passenger transport services using shared resources.”
     
Samtrafiken, a consortium of 37 investor-owners from the public and the private sector, is set to lead a trail in Sweden aimed at “establishing a national integration platform.”
According to Laurell, “the aim is to enable and promote combined  mobility services on a large scale, and third party sales in general by  making PTA services available via a national access point.” The trial  will “ensure a common regulatory framework. The starting point will be  PTA services in Gothenburg area (Västtrafik) during 2017/2018, followed  by schemes in Stockholm and Malmö in 2018/2019.”
     
“We  want to see new combined mobility services and sales channels emerge in  Sweden,” he says, and “we are searching for a technical  supplier/partner for a national integration platform starting now.” The  vision is to “enable the emergence of simple, sustainable and profitable  combined mobility services.”
     
Laurell  said there are still too many single occupancy vehicles and fellow  panellists Michael Kieslinger, managing partner of Fluidtime Data  Services and Martin Russ, managing director of 
     
“We need to change value  perspectives and address people’s emotions if we are ever going to  compete with the privately-owned car. And we have to put the user at the  centre of it all.”
     
Russ has a road-map to the future which links together policy, data, business and impact (see image).
 
Kieslinger  has a vision too. “Keep it simple,” he told the conference.  “Be like  
     
He   is working on an Austrian research project to establish an integrated   mobility platform involving Austria’s two largest mobility providers -   Wiener Stadtwerke and Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB). The scheme has   “15 integrated transport service providers and was initially conceived   under the project Smile which ran until May 2015.  
     
The   project created a ‘Fluid Hub’ to enable cities and regions to set-up  an  ecosystem and open their markets for integrated mobility and MaaS   deployments. “The platform links traveller demand to mobility offerings,   providing them with efficient, affordable, accessible and green   mobility options,” said Kieslinger.
Project  objectives include socially inclusive and  affordable access to  mobility, fostering environmentally friendly  mobility, supporting local  transport offerings, managing traffic across  modalities and introducing  on-demand first/last mile services with  reducing operational costs. This  is designed to secure the transport  offering in a fast-changing  mobility landscape; provide integrated and  seamless configurable  mobility; create customer-centred offerings;  create new or value-added  business and profit from valuable  reseller-agreements.
 
Ask   yourself some difficult questions before you embark on a MaaS  market   project, Kieslinger advised the conference delegates. “Do you  want to   sell each other’s services? Do you want others to sell your  services?”
     
Don’t   get  involved if you have not asked yourself “what is your favourite    strategic/policy option? Are you open to data and API de- or    re-regulation? What is your perspective on innovation? Do you have or    want an open business environment?”
     
And,    most importantly of all, know who you are dealing with … “Do you  think   you know enough about your customers,” Kieslinger asked? 
     
Maybe setting up a MaaS scheme, and analysing the data it generates, will be the only reliable way to answer that one.
    
        
        
        



