The fast-growing interest in Mobility-as-a-Service (
     
These latest systems are designed for MaaS providers and build on the company’s traditional tolling and traffic management solutions. Pedro Bento, executive director for marketing and sales at A-to-Be, describes MoveBeyond as a multi-modal back office system which links to the various transport operators’ (bus, train, vehicle share…) existing systems. In doing so MoveBeyond not only handles transaction management, billing, enforcement, certified payment clearance and fraud control, it also manages and implements the business rules and provides management analytics.
     
Once a traveller has used a MaaS app to define the journey they want to undertake, MoveBeyond calculates the various travel options with reference to the user’s preferences and live travel information, supported in a range of mobility commercial bundles offered by a MaaS Provider. Having selected their preferred travel option, MoveBeyond verifies the transaction and all parties are provided with confirmation. Anonymised high-level information about travellers’ routines is also available for travel management planning.
     
A learning function within MoveBeyond helps to improve the overall travel experience by continually refining the options suggested to users depending on their previous selections. 
     
Where necessary, gates, barriers or even cycle hire lockers can be opened directly by the MaaS provider using LinkBeyond. According to Bento, the use of this piece of smart hardware means that all types of transport provision can be incorporated in the MaaS offering.
     
“With these two systems a MaaS provider is ready to go - and if required we can provide the app too,” says Bento.
     
Traffic modelling software specialist 
     
PTV UK director Devrim Kara, describes MaaS Modeller as a strategic planning tool that allows city authorities to assess different MaaS concepts and design their integration with the existing multi-modal transport infrastructure. MaaS Modeller can also support fleet operators to design feasible services in consideration of existing city transport system performance and patterns, fleet/vehicle configurations and operating cost/revenue scenarios. The system can calculate a wide range of KPIs (reflecting the objectives of authorities and operators) which can encourage collaboration in deploying MaaS services.
 
     
Kara  describes MaaS Operator as a despatching component – effectively the  MaaS component for a taxi or public transport control room and will be  available later this year as a real-time operations tool for trip  requests and vehicle assignments across MaaS fleets. It will also  include a data warehouse solution for analysing and optimising the  system as well as monitoring system performance and vehicle occupancy.
     
Still  under development is MaaS Controller which will offer real-time control  of connected vehicles and infrastructure, traffic lights optimisation  and predictive routing optimisation, forming the components for a  real-time city transport network operating system. 
     
According  to Kara, MaaS Operator provides the traffic component of a full MaaS  ecosystem to work alongside third party components that focus on  payment, communication and other aspects of the user experience.
     
Australian  based SkedGo is a small company having a big impact in the MaaS sector.  Its TripGo trip planning app currently covers 200 cities from Tromso in  Norway to Bahia Blanca in Argentina and has a large concentration of  coverage in the US, parts of Europe and the east coast of Australia.
     
TripGo  can incorporate trains, buses, tram, metro, car share, bike share, taxi  and walking in its route planning depending on the availability of data  feeds and APIs from the various participating transport operators in  each city. When viewed on a computer, the modes and number of routes  covered in each location are displayed.
     
The  company also allows access to their app back-end via an API which  enables third parties to include the route finding element in their own  white-labelled app. As such its technology is behind an increasing  number of early MaaS offerings including MaaS Global, RioGo and Xerox’s  (now 
     
In populating  its routing apps SkedGo takes all participating transport operators’  information from their static and real-time data feeds as well as APIs  and processes them by its mixed modal routing engine to create trip  routings and options using any combination of private, public and  commercial transport. In some cities, such as Sydney and Toronto, the  app uses the available real-time information to let users know if a bus  has seats available.
     
The  system allows individuals to prioritise between reducing travel time,  cost, CO2 emissions or modal transfers and now includes an in-built  preference for directing cyclists towards cycle paths with routing  results indicating which parts of a route are cycle friendly. And in a  growing number of cities, the system can provide  wheelchair-accessibility information for public transport and walking  routes. 
 
     
While   SkedGo’s platform can enable transport (and other) providers and MaaS   operators to book their services through the app, currently this is  only  applicable to certain parts of a journey such as Uber, Lyft,   Swiftfleet, Car2Go and a few others. “Additionally we can make a payment   option available anywhere as long as the transport operator (or other   service provider) can give us an API that allows for selling their   services,” says SkedGo founder and CEO, Claus von Hessberg.
     
The   sale of ‘tickets’ for mass transit agencies through the app is   conducted via mobile payment partners with options under consideration   in Australia and New Zealand. Currently Finland is the only place where   some public transport rides can be purchased. “The bottleneck is the   transport service providers,” adds von Hessberg
     
When   asked if a city authority which already has open transport API’s could   use SkedGo’s systems to offer an ‘off-the-shelf’ MaaS service, he   replies: “Yes we can do that.” 
     
Such   an offering can also include SkedGo’s global partners including   SwiftFleet (which covers the top 500 car rental companies globally),   Uber and other national and international offerings. While   white-labelling allows an enterprise or authority to retain ownership,   there would be a setting up cost (typically between £100,000 and   £200,000) plus volume-dependant API charges and a small levy for the   mobile ticketing operation. Alternatively it can be completely free of   charge for the authority if it endorses TripGo and certain commercial   players to take a transaction fee on each sale.    
     
In   terms of a payback, von Hessberg says: “With transport integration it   doesn’t make sense to drive into downtown. We are working on smoothing   intermodal switches by telling people where there are car parks near  bus  stations and metro lines. This is essential if MaaS is to succeed  and  will increase public transport ridership which will offset the cost  of  providing the service via the app.”
     
To   date the app, in all its guises, has been downloaded by more than one   million users and provides about eight million travel plans per month. 
    
        
        



