Business Standard

Unable to beat them, cabbies join Uber and Lyft in ride sharing

- BLOOMBERG

Taxi companies across the US waged a bitter, high-profile battle to keep Uber Technologi­es Inc and Lyft Inc from bringing the sharing economy to cabs.They lost.

Now the cabbies are adopting a if-you-can’t-beatthem, join-them-strategy.

Pittsburgh Yellow Cab, for example, rebranded itself last year as zTrip. A century-old fixture in Steel City, it launched an app and offered a hybrid of services: accepting cash along with credit cards, letting rides be hailed from a corner or scheduled online and forgoing Uber’s controvers­ial surge pricing during peak periods. “The pie’s bigger,” said Jamie Campolongo, the company’s president. “So why not get over in that segment?”

Campolongo was able to do that, in part, because of regulatory changes the ride-sharing companies championed. Uber and Lyft have spent millions of dollars to win approval for their web-based business model in nearly all 50 states. In many cases, this allowed them to escape more onerous regulation­s put on cab companies, such as background checks with fingerprin­ting and requiremen­ts to carry commercial insurance.

The effort changed both industries. Across the “rides” industry, the number of independen­t contractor­s has grown by 174 percent in five years, compared with only 21 percent for cab company drivers, according to a Brookings Institutio­n analysis. Along the way, as in other industries disrupted by technologi­es, the ride-sharing services drove some old-line taxi companies into bankruptcy while clearing the way for others to compete with them head-to-head.

“A perfect example for us was the last home Steelers game,” Campolongo said. ZTrip had 300 of its cabs out along with 126 independen­t contractor­s to ferry football fans around. “We would have never had 426 cars on the road. The ebb and flow of this business allows the company to kind of expand and contract.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India