https://www.cnbc.com/2018/07/27/gms-maven-offers-to-put-owners-cars-to-work.html
GM owners can make money off their Buicks with Maven car-sharing service
28 July 2018  Paul A. Eisenstein

[image  
https://fm.cnbc.com/applications/cnbc.com/resources/img/editorial/2017/07/31/104621956-GettyImages-660448312.1910x1000.jpg?v=1501533069
Chevrolet Bolt electric vehicles (EV) stand on display during the press day
of the Seoul Motor Show in Goyang, South Korea
 / SeongJoon Cho | Bloomberg | Getty Images
]

  - GM is using its car-sharing service Maven to pilot a new car-sharing
service in three Midwest cities.
  - The owner of a Chevrolet Equinox who constantly rents out the vehicle
could take home $500 a month, GM said.
  - With the sharing economy, there's growing demand for transportation
alternatives. 

[image]  Cadillac Escalade Platinum ice  / General Motors

The typical American driver spends no more than an hour a day behind the
wheel, effectively paying to let that vehicle sit idle most of the time,
when they could be making $500 or more a month sharing it with strangers,
according to General Motors.

The Detroit automaker is using its car-sharing service Maven to pilot a new
peer-to-peer service in three Midwest cities. It allows GM owners to share
their Buicks, Chevys and Cadillacs with other GM customers.

Maven already has 150,000 registered subscribers that it serves with a fleet
of GM-owned cars, trucks and crossovers. As part of its plan to expand,
Maven wants to sign up GM owners with vehicles from the 2015 model year or
newer and give its customers access to those, as well, splitting the rental
fee.

"It's time to put your car to work," said Julia Steyn, vice president of GM
Urban Mobility services and Maven, adding that "your car is one of the most
expensive things you own. Sitting idle, it is a wasted asset."

Indeed, considering that data service Edmunds estimates the average new 2018
model went for around $34,000 last month, that's a lot of money tied up in a
vehicle you don't use all that much.

With the sharing economy, there's growing demand for transportation
alternatives. For some folks, the answer is simply to tap a smartphone app
and call for an Uber or some other ride-hailing service. But others prefer
to drive themselves, and ride-sharing services provide an alternative to
traditional car rental companies for those who might only need a set of
wheels for an hour or two.

Traditionally, car-sharing services like Maven or Car2Go have to set up
their own vehicle networks, which is a costly undertaking. Since it was
established in 2016, Maven claims to have logged 300 million miles on its
factory-owned vehicles.

It's not the first car-sharing service to adopt a peer-to-peer model. That's
the foundation of Turo, the San Francisco-based transportation provider that
started out as RelayRides in 2010. It now claims to have 4 million
registered customers who can access 170,000 vehicles across the country.

That independently operated service offers a broad mix of vehicles owners
can choose from for both short- and longer-term rentals, claiming to provide
an average 30 percent discount compared with conventional rent-a-car
companies like Avis or Hertz. It offers a wide range of new, and even some
old vehicles, with prices ranging from $10 all the way up to $250 a day.

Maven says it will only work with owners of Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet and
GMC vehicles from the 2015 model year or newer. Like Turo, it will let
owners set pricing, though it will provide a guide based on what similar
products are going for.

The GM subsidiary hasn't yet released many details, including how it will
reimburse owners. Steyn suggested that an owner of a Chevrolet Equinox who
constantly rents the vehicle out could take home $500 or so a month. That
figure actually comes in a bit below what Turo claims an owner can make.
Considering the base price of a new 2018 Equinox, around $24,000, Turos
website suggests "you could earn $14,023 annually." The San Francisco
car-sharing service gives owners a 65 to 85 percent cut of the rental fee.

Whatever the final numbers, owners will have to cover things like gas and
maintenance. The extra cash could help cover a motorist's monthly car note.
And the GM service is suggesting some owners may find the extra cash helps
them upgrade the car they buy.
The Chevy Camaro ZL1 introduced at the New York International Car Show at
the Javits Center on March 23, 2016 in New York, NY.

[image]  The Chevy Camaro ZL1 ice introduced at the New York International
Car Show at the Javits Center on March 23, 2016 in New York, NY.  / Ashlee
Espinal | CNBC

Maven will kick in a $1 million insurance plan, as well. But owners will
have to accept the idea that they might occasionally find a renter stuck in
traffic or simply not back when expected. And there's the reality that
owners won't be able to use their own cars to store child seats, beach bags
or soccer balls.

In its early years, Turo actually partnered with General Motors' OnStar
telematics subsidiary. That relationship ended in 2013. Now, OnStar will be
a critical part of the Maven peer-to-peer project. All new GM vehicles sold
in the U.S. in recent years have been equipped with OnStar and built-in 4G
Wi-Fi.

When a Maven customer is ready to pick up a vehicle, OnStar signals the
vehicle to unlock its doors and lets the user turn the car on with the
smartphone app. Owners who sign up will have their cars modified to allow
the same functionality.


GM has big plans for Maven, the service is expected to start using
autonomous versions of GM's Chevrolet Bolt EV as early as 2019.


PSA, the French parent of Peugeot and Citroen, also has launched a
car-sharing service out of Los Angeles International Airport. It eventually
plans to expand and use LAX as the base for a planned return to the U.S.
after a nearly three-decade absence.
[© CNBC.com]


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