Luke Schneider is CTO and vice president of strategy at Flexcar, a car-sharing business founded in 1999 as a public/private partnership in Washington state. Flexcar is now a private, for-profit company owned by Steve Case's Washington, D.C.-based investment firm Revolution LLC.
Flexcar is doubling in size each year, Schneider says, and now has operations in more than a dozen large cities. CIO Decisions spoke with Schneider recently about the challenges of the fast-growing business.
Interview With: Luke Schneider |
| TITLE: CTO and vice president of strategy COMPANY: Flexcar IT STAFF: 15 EMPLOYEES: 150 KEYWORDS: Telematics, wireless, application development BACKGROUND: Mechanical engineering and MBA degrees; worked at Ford, then consulting firm Pittiglio Rabin Todd & McGrath; launched B2eMarkets, a supply chain management software startup; joined Flexcar in October 2006. |
Why has the car-sharing business taken off in the last few years?
The advent of reliable telematics. Five, six years ago, folks used to do this manually. There were trip tickets located in the vehicle and individuals would fill out this ticket. [Now they have] the ability to carry around a smart card as the equal of a set of keys. Wireless technology and the presence of reservation and billing systems enable this.
How does it work?
The member goes to our Web site, locates a vehicle and reserves it. The system sends a SMS message that goes to the car. The member presents his smart card to a reader under the windshield.
What are your most critical systems?
At the core is the telematics system. That's the backbone of car sharing. That experience has to be seamless and flawless. There are two parts: reservations and billing. It would seem simple, but when you're dealing with so many institutions it can be challenging. After that it's the management of fleet and member data. Some of it we build, some we outsource.
What did you build yourself?
The reservations system we developed internally. There are a lot of reservation systems out there. When we started out, we thought it was ideal for outsourcing. But as we got into it, car sharing turned out to be different enough that we chose to build it ourselves.
We also built the billing piece. We have a variable pricing concept. We offer different prices depending on the time of day. In addition to helping us manage revenue, it helps manage demand. You can use pricing as a means to level demand. It's the ability to bill and process trips tied closely to the reservation system.
We also did our own DMA, data management application, which is what we call our fleet management system. It allows us to manage member affairs, cross-linked with the vehicle; we also manage fulfillment through there. It's a broad tool that goes pretty deep. I've never seen a tool quite like it. It can tell me so much, but it can be a very nonlinear experience, like surfing the Web. It does a nice job of anticipating what sort of information you need.
This was first published in November 2007