Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lyft test lets rider request taco stop

Service provides drive-thru option

- SAPNA MAHESHWARI

Taco Bell has, quite literally, found a new marketing vehicle, and its name is Lyft.

The fast-food chain started a venture with the ride-sharing company last week that allows Lyft passengers to request rides that incorporat­e a stop at a Taco Bell drive-thru between 9 p.m. and 2 a.m.

The companies will test the option, which will appear as “Taco Mode” in the Lyft app, during the next two weeks around a Newport Beach, Calif., location, with plans to expand the program nationally next year.

It is an attempt to tap into the trend of young people increasing­ly carpooling through apps like Lyft and its larger rival Uber, particular­ly on nights out with friends. While Taco Bell offers delivery to customers and advertises the locations of its restaurant­s through the navigation app Waze, working with a ride-hailing company represents a new type of “experience innovation,” said Marisa Thalberg, Taco Bell’s chief marketing officer.

“I kind of think of this like inverse delivery — like we’re delivering you to Taco Bell,” she said in an interview. “You’re being de-

● livered to the food as opposed to having to get in your own car and drive.”

As it stands, Lyft and Uber do not have stated policies about how drivers should handle passenger requests to swing by fast-food drivethrus, though the question regularly pops up in online discussion forums for drivers.

“Several times I said no to food and they ask why and I explained what the last idiot did of making a mess and each time the present idiot would promise to not make a mess, spill, waste, etc. then they do it anyway!” one Uber driver wrote in an online forum.

Thalberg said her company had seen “a bunch of funny tweets” and other social media posts from hungry passengers on the topic, which got them

thinking about a potential partnershi­p with Lyft.

“Some people are either afraid to ask or don’t know if they can ask,” Thalberg said. “We’re taking all those question marks of, ‘Would it be unseemly to ask my Lyft driver to go through the Taco Bell drive-thru?’ And now we’re not only going to make it permissibl­e, we’re going to celebrate this behavior.”

Taco Bell and Lyft’s initial test will be limited to a “tight region” around the Newport Beach location and include taco logos inside the app, branded taco-themed vehicles and in-car menus, said Melissa Waters, Lyft’s head of marketing. While Lyft has struck up partnershi­ps with other companies such as Starbucks and Delta, she said it was a first for it to be “actually fulfilling a ride experience for a brand.”

“We will allow drivers to

opt in to that so we can make sure we understand their full experience, and the customers can get the full delight of opting into ‘Taco Mode,’” she said. “Then we can fully understand how everything works before we roll out more broadly in Southern California, then more broadly nationally.”

It is easy to see how a model like this, if successful, could be replicated by other fast-food chains and ridesharin­g companies.

“It’s pretty obvious there’s a lot of food delivery out there and lots of apps and services that allow you to take food to people,” Waters said. “This is really turning this concept on its head of just delivering food to delivering you to food and extending the night.”

Taco Bell is not paying Lyft for the deal, which has been in the works for almost a year, Waters said. The companies are looking at the venture as

“co-creating an experience together,” which cannot be evaluated the way one might look at traditiona­l marketing efforts like television commercial­s and billboards, she said.

“Marketing today is so much about customer experience, not branding and advertisin­g,” she said. “We’re really evaluating it from a surprise and delight for our consumer bases with a program like this and both meeting in the middle and developing it on both sides.”

Thalberg, who noted that the deal prevented Lyft from pursuing similar partnershi­ps with its competitor­s, said she was enthusiast­ic about the program’s possibilit­ies.

“What drives us both is a vision much bigger than what would be apparent to the naked eye,” she said. “I hope it’s the tip of the iceberg of what we can do.”

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