Really nice on paper, but likely unsustainable. 


New York’s newest ride-hail app is feeding off drivers’ desperation
http://www.recode.net/2016/6/18/11965108/juno-uber-lyft-drivers-friendly-spend
(via Instapaper)

New York’s newest ride-hail app is everything drivers have ever wanted: A 
partner, a good listener and — just maybe — a steady stream of cash. But it’s 
unclear how long the founders will be able to sustain this uber-driver-friendly 
service.

Juno, which has yet to set its official launch date, may still be in beta mode 
but has already amassed 9,000 drivers since May, according to the company. Now, 
drivers are aggressively recruiting riders they come across while operating on 
Uber and Lyft’s platforms.

On two occasions in the last week, an Uber and then a Lyft driver asked me to 
sign up for the service. A coworker who is just in town for a week also came 
across an Uber driver-turned-Juno-recruiter. Their spiel was simple: Juno is 
better for drivers because the company only takes 10 percent commission 
(compared to Uber and Lyft which take more than 25 percent); the company 
actually listens to their suggestions and concerns all while offering riders 
cheaper fares. It’s a win-win-win.

Side-by-side comparisons of rides on Juno, Uber and Lyft verify the claim that 
the fares are cheaper. One ride from Recode’s office in midtown New York to 
Brooklyn Heights, for example, was estimated to be between $14 and $17 on Juno, 
while on Uber and Lyft the ride was estimated to cost between $19 and $29. The 
company also claims hundreds of drivers come into their offices every day, and 
it engages frequently with drivers on online forums like Uberpeople.net.

               
But before even officially launching, Juno has poured considerable resources 
into its operations. For one, drivers receive $15 the first time any person 
they referred to the app takes a ride on Juno. It’s a smart tactic and is 
likely why drivers are being so forward about referring riders. Drivers were 
also being paid $50 a week simply to be on the app before there were any riders.

On top of that, the company has reserved one billion of the company’s shares 
for drivers and plans to issue 25 million shares per quarter depending on how 
much each person drives for Juno. The company, founded by Viber co-founder 
Talmon Marco who sold the company to Rakuten for $900 million, has also nabbed 
10,000 square feet of office space on the 84th floor of One World Trade Center, 
where Marco is paying at least $750,000 for a year-long lease.

                                   
A Juno official responding to a drivers’ concerns on UberPeople.net
Add to that the $50 a week Juno was paying its thousands of drivers, which 
let’s say on the low end is 5,000, to simply be on the app. If we account for 
just one week of the driver promotion and an approximation of the lease alone, 
Juno has shelled out (or at least is contracted to shell out) at least $1 
million before even launching. That’s being conservative. Since the company 
launched in beta in May, at the very least the promotion has been running for 
four weeks. With 5,000 drivers the company would have paid out $1 million in 
just driver promotions.

One Uber driver who has been using Juno said he hasn’t had a single request 
yet. Even so, all rides are currently 35 percent off. So with the few rides 
Juno drivers may be performing pre-launch, the company is making 35 percent 
less than the standard fare on each and will only be taking a 10 percent cut of 
that. On a $17 ride, which Juno estimates would typically be between $21 and 
$25, the company is only making $1.70.

At launch, the company will have to make at least $1 million (and that’s 
without counting the rider referral bonuses, the costs of things like the 
phones and swag Juno has given out and other operating costs) to break even.

But drivers we spoke to are convinced Juno is the answer to their frustrations 
of working with Uber and Lyft. Drivers are clinging to any signs of being 
heard, getting to keep more of their money and being treated as actual 
partners. To Juno’s credit, treating drivers better is built into the app: For 
one, drivers can rate and ask never to be matched again with a specific rider.

That motivation to treat drivers better was, at least in part, financially 
fueled. In an interview with Vanity Fair, Marco said after speaking with 
drivers he saw that the driver-friendly angle was the only way into the 
ride-hail industry. But what if it stops being financially viable?

I asked drivers if they thought what Juno was doing was sustainable and their 
answer was that the company really cares so they’ll keep treating the drivers 
well. Even in mentioning that Uber and Lyft, too, launched in New York with 
higher fares and met with many of the first New York drivers, drivers were 
unfazed. Juno was better, they were convinced, and this will last.

Of course, there’s still the very real possibility Juno will be able to 
continue being the driver-friendly app. According to unconfirmed reports, the 
company is in the middle of raising a $30 million round of funding which would 
certainly bolster its efforts to pour resources into driver and rider 
recruitment. The company also said they have 23,000 customers waiting to sign 
up for the service.

But at this spend rate and with these low margins, it seems unlikely the 
company will be able to sustain its operations. Eventually, it may have to 
either raise commissions or raise fares. Raising commissions might hurt the 
company’s driver retention but raising fares means they might lose their riders 
and take a hit to their revenue. Not to mention, both Uber and Lyft are 
relentless and at times merciless opponents. Remember Sidecar?



Sent from my iPhone

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