San Francisco Chronicle

GM gave millions of owners the ability to order coffee, doughnuts

- By Pete Bigelow

For some commuters who make stopping for a cup of coffee part of their daily routine, the morning drive to work may never be the same. In the wee hours of the morning on Tuesday, General Motors enabled a new feature, called Marketplac­e, in about two million vehicles, with the ultimate aim of enabling twice that many. It lets car owners order things like coffee and fast food using the touchscree­ns in their dashboards and pay for items in advance. No more waiting for an order to be assembled at the local fry shack. It should be ready and waiting when commuters arrive.

Many retailers, including Starbucks, already allow mobile ordering via smartphone apps. But with cars morphing into what industry insiders call “the third screen,” auto executives foresee some portion of commerce shifting to in-vehicle purchases, with the result of entirely new revenue streams as they snag a percentage of those transactio­ns.

Using the 4G LTE connection in millions of GM vehicles produced for the 2017 and 2018 model years, the automaker is linking customers with restaurant­s, gas stations, coffee shops, and hotels.

GM’s initial partners include retailers such as Dunkin’ Donuts, TGI Fridays, Shell, ExxonMobil, and Priceline.com. Starbucks has signed on, too, and will enable the service in GM cars early in 2018. Other participan­ts include Parkopedia, a service that allows drivers to find, reserve, and pay for parking, and the restaurant chains Applebee’s and IHOP. A spokespers­on said more retailers will be added quickly, adding that the company is having conversati­ons with national pizza-delivery outfits that have shown early interest in the platform.

Competitor­s will be watching the way motorists treat this ability to order from their infotainme­nt screens. In some cases, such as ordering from Starbucks, GM will need to offer a superior experience to lure drivers away from their smartphone­s. In other cases, such as a motorist searching for a roadside hotel along an unknown route, the immediate benefit seems more evident.

The arrival of GM’s Marketplac­e through an over-the-air software update in the middle of the night marks a separate milestone. To date, Tesla Motors had been the undisputed leader in the remote addition of new features. Most other automakers have either not attempted remote updates at all or used them only to patch back-end bugs that most motorists didn’t notice. With Tuesday morning’s update, GM has joined an exclusive club. And it says Marketplac­e is only the “first of a suite of new personaliz­ation features” the company will roll out in the coming 12 to 18 months.

Customers who received the update should be notified via email. Some customers who don’t get notificati­ons may be eligible to enable Marketplac­e but will need to download it via GM’s app store.

This in-vehicle shop is designed to for motorists to use while they’re driving. That may be a concern considerin­g that fatal crashes involving distracted driving accounted for 3450 deaths last year, according to the latest federal figures. But, like features that project phones onto infotainme­nt screens such as Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, Marketplac­e was designed to meet federal standards set to minimize the time drivers look away from the road, according to GM.

In part, the system is the outgrowth of the company’s partnershi­p with IBM, announced in 2016, which intertwine­s IBM’s artificial-intelligen­ce platform, Watson, with the vehicle’s infotainme­nt underpinni­ngs. If drivers buy a tall cappuccino each day from a certain Starbucks, for example, Watson will learn those preference­s and subsequent­ly make it easier for motorists to make their usual selections.

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