Skip to main content

Technology, shifts in behaviour can improve urban transportation, says Conduent

According to Conduent’s Customer Experience of Urban Travel report that details findings from a survey conducted in 23 cities in 15 countries, although improved infrastructure plays a critical role in reshaping mobility in today’s cities, the biggest factor in improving urban travel is changing human behaviour. Researchers found that transportation selection is based on habit rather than rational choice, noting that respondents around the globe chose driving their own car over other modes of transport for r
May 24, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
According to 8612 Conduent’s Customer Experience of Urban Travel report that details findings from a survey conducted in 23 cities in 15 countries, although improved infrastructure plays a critical role in reshaping mobility in today’s cities, the biggest factor in improving urban travel is changing human behaviour.


Researchers found that transportation selection is based on habit rather than rational choice, noting that respondents around the globe chose driving their own car over other modes of transport for reasons including comfort (54 per cent), ease of access (47 per cent) and reliability (39 per cent).

Despite experiencing delays at least one day a week, which nearly 40 per cent of respondents reported produced negative emotions such as ‘stressed’ or ‘frustrated’, people still chose to drive.

Don Hubicki, executive vice president, Conduent, Public Sector, Transportation explained that people primarily focus on their individual situation, factoring in speed, comfort and cost when determining how they’d like to travel, saying removing the situational factor is key to changing behaviour. To accomplish this, cities could introduce more options for getting around, incentivise people to choose alternate options and provide innovative apps that enable people to think mode-agnostically, making better decisions for themselves and everyone else.

Hubicki commented that despite an over-reliance on cars, the survey shows more than half of respondents find the proposition of a multimodal experience appealing. Multimodal systems allow commuters to use more than one mode of transportation per journey.

Respondents rated reliability of services (83 per cent) and information (81 per cent) as fairly or very important for future travel. In addition, nearly three-quarters of respondents (70 per cent) said they’d likely be encouraged to ride public transit more frequently if the journey time was faster.

Conduent believes transportation innovation such travel apps showing all available modes and routes for commuters to reach their destination would help the move to multi-modal transport, with nearly half (49 per cent) of all respondents believe they will have one app for their transportation needs by 2020.

“The future of transportation is a combination of what’s possible and what’s needed,” said Hubicki. “People often don’t know there’s a better way, so when they imagine the future, they’re limited by their current experiences and perceptions of travel. There is an opportunity to educate and show the way forward.”

Related Content

  • September 9, 2016
    UK drivers want to be insured against hackers
    According to a new survey of almost 1,200 people by road safety charity IAM RoadSmart, 74 per cent of drivers think insurers should provide cover for damage caused by hackers accessing control systems in driverless cars. The results of this survey have been used to guide IAM RoadSmart’s response to the Centre for Connected & Autonomous Vehicles’ consultation, Pathway to Driverless Cars.
  • March 15, 2022
    Innovia & The Ray feel the pulse
    Getting drivers to slow down and space themselves safely on the road is a problem – but a collaboration between Innovia Technology and The Ray may have found a new way to do it
  • March 6, 2023
    Sampo Hietanen on MaaS: “We needed better dreams”
    Sampo Hietanen, founder of MaaS Global, is one of the authors of the Mobility as a Service concept: the dream is still real, but MaaS needs to evolve, he insists
  • December 6, 2022
    Hayden AI’s Renee Autumn Ray: ‘It’s about problem solving’
    Renee Autumn Ray is senior director of global strategy for Hayden AI. She has also admitted to impostor syndrome, has no time for people who scorn the public sector and offers one simple rule about social media. Adam Hill meets her to find out what that is, among other things