Houston Chronicle Sunday

Harvey’s lessons moved GasBuddy to upgrade app

Identifyin­g stations in Florida without fuel became a fast mission

- By David Wethe

As Hurricane Irma rushed toward a Florida landfall, GasBuddy, best known for helping drivers find the lowest fuel prices, raced to put into action a lesson learned from Harvey just a week earlier.

A run on gas at stations in South Texas after Harvey struck convinced Walt Doyle, the company’s chief executive officer and a former venture capitalist at Highland Capital Partners, that GasBuddy needed to quickly expand its offerings to help Florida as it readied for Irma. The goal: Reengineer its mobile app in a single night to help drivers identify which stations had run out of fuel or had lost their electricit­y.

“At a time of crisis, people go to their fuel stations,” said Doyle, 50, who was named CEO at GasBuddy at the start of last year. “It’s the tip of the spear. You never really think about it until things are really bad.”

Twenty web developers in Boston and Saskatchew­an went to work, sustained by rounds of pizza. The result: Florida Gov. Rick Scott, in a news conference just before Irma struck the state, praised the company for its usefulness in helping drivers evacuate.

It’s an addition with staying power for future disasters, according to Doyle.

“Fuel is almost a currency,” he said in a phone interview.

GasBuddy, which launched 17 years ago, relies on users to say what the price of gas is at stations across the country, handling about 2 million submission­s a day, according to its website. Headquarte­red in Boston, the company has offices in San Diego and Washington, as well as Canada and Australia.

Downloads of the app surged 71 percent during the hour that Scott mentioned GasBuddy on Sept. 7, compared with the hour before his news conference, the company said. The app was downloaded 1.8 million times between Aug. 26 and Sept. 11, it said.

When users started entering unusual prices such as $0.00 or $9.99 a gallon for gas stations in the Dallas area to signal that they had run out of gas, GasBuddy knew it needed to update its app, said Allison Mac, a company spokeswoma­n.

The first thing added was the ability to track gas station outages on its website, but the team quickly realized it needed an allnight hackathon to develop code and test it out for its larger audience of users on the mobile phone app, Mac said by telephone.

The company was bought in 2013 by the Marylandba­sed private equity group UCG, which subsequent­ly hired Doyle as its CEO. The self-described serial entreprene­ur most recently worked as a venture partner at Highland Capital Partners, where he helped launch an identity authentica­tion business called Confirm.io.

Since the company’s been in existence, its app has been downloaded 70 million times, Doyle said.

Over the past couple of weeks, GasBuddy was “basically chasing the storm,” said Mac, the company spokeswoma­n. “During natural disasters, gas is a lifeline.”

 ?? David Goldman / Associated Press ?? Drivers wait as a station in Miromar Lakes, Fla., opens for the first time since Hurricane Irma passed through. “During natural disasters, gas is a lifeline,” a GasBuddy spokeswoma­n says.
David Goldman / Associated Press Drivers wait as a station in Miromar Lakes, Fla., opens for the first time since Hurricane Irma passed through. “During natural disasters, gas is a lifeline,” a GasBuddy spokeswoma­n says.
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