UBER VS ZIPCAR Analysis
UBER VS ZIPCAR Analysis
UBER VS ZIPCAR Analysis
Zipcar and Uber are both very innovative companies that, at least in part,
appeal to the same customer and offer similar customer value propositions.
Today, we are going to compare their business models. To start with the
confusing part first, both can be categorised into more than one business
model.
Zipcar falls under the Pay-per-use business models often also called “On-
demand” business models. Both are very similar though not exactly the
same. And if that is not confusing, Zipcar also considered part of
the sharing economy by some.
Uber, on the other side, uses a platform business model (and there is no
differing view here, phew). But this would be too easy! The differing views
are on whether or not they are also part of the sharing economy. Many
experts as well as most of the media consider Uber part of this socio-
economic trend (the sharing economy) and so do I.
If you don’t worry to much about terminology (and I recommend you don’t),
then you can move onto the easier task. And that is actually the
comparison of their business models on a more detailed level.
Regardless which way you measure, it seems cars are parked roughly 95%
of the time. Add to this the fact that it costs an average of $8,558 per year
to own a car in the U.S.
Average cost of ownership per year in the US: $8,558 ($23 / day)
Cars are utilised only 5% of the time (72 mins/day)
Economic benefit for consumer of $6.8b (in the US) in 2015 from Uber
alone
Zipcar moves the responsibility for fuelling the car to the user; same with
keeping the car clean. But they are responsible themselves for getting the
maintenance conducted. Take as an example getting the car serviced at
the right intervals.
Zipcar: reduction of transaction costs (e.g. having to check the car after
each usage) by pushing responsibility to the user
Uber and Airbnb go one step further. They push this task to the owner of
the asset. Thus, they incur no costs in relation to the fuel, the act of fuelling,
maintenance, cleaning, etc. They rely on the fact that if a car looks very
messy or unsafe, e.g. due to unrepaired damages, the customer will either
complain or give the driver a bad rating after the ride. Airbnb relies on
similar mechanisms. Further on they foster a community and award “super
hosts” – those hosts who get repeat great ratings/feedback. I have covered
Airbnb at great detail here using the business model canvas
(and Uber here).
You might say that Zipcar passes all these costs onto the user anyway. But
the whole point is that this makes Zipcar’s offering more expensive and
thus less competitive. And this holds equally true if they lease the cars
(which they partly do) as the cost of ownership of the car for the respective
portion of its lifecycle will be pushed to Zipcar in any case.
Comparison of cost allocation Uber vs Zipcar. This is where the big
differences are
With Zipcar, there is still some effort involved for the user in bridging the
“last mile.” This is true for many of the on-demand, platform business
models and sharing economy companies where tangible goods are
involved. E.g. if I want to borrow a drill, camping equipment or a
lawnmower, I have to go and pick it up and return it.
Uber offers the convenience of the car coming to you, i.e. has zero cost of
distributing the asset or service.
Uber cars
move like little ants near my mobile phone GPS-located pick-up point.
Zipcars are in static locations at their designated parking spot waiting for
me to pick one of them up
“I would never be able to provide you a car for an hour if the transaction
cost was anything” Robin Chase, former CEO and co-founder Zipcar.
Uber brings two parties (often peers) in touch while providing clear
guidelines on their interactions. Where necessary they will need to have an
arbitration process. Zipcar doesn’t bring peers in touch as they own the
product/service themselves. Nevertheless, they both have to keep
transactions lean.
(5) Trust
Trust is important for any company. But it is more important for newer and
less known companies. This affects all areas of the business, starting from
making business with them to feeling comfortable with the offering.
This may be equally stated about any country. But having to run TV
commercials (or other expensive forms of ads) is exactly that: an expensive
way to be trusted. And it may not work for many young companies.
You can imagine how steep the trust barrier would be if the payments had
to be conducted between peers. Sharing economy companies do not use
any cash payments nor peer-to-peer payments. All payments directly go
to the company.
(6) Safety/insurance/liability
Depending on the type of business many other safety measures are being
put in place. Both Zipcar and Uber have requirements to the age and
inspections of their vehicles. Uber additionally has to put checks into place
regarding the driver (driving history, criminal background, etc).
Uber aspires to go beyond just driver and rider safety by doing stuff for the
community.
Zipcar owns various types of cars. But they select the vehicles types that
a being added to their fleet. They seem to be increasingly distinguishing
between those types which they provide to students (located near
campuses) and those they offer to businesses (located near CBDs and
airports).
Uber takes a different approach partly because they don’t have control over
the asset. And partly because it may be a great system. The
quality/experience of the actual ride is rated by the passenger (btw the
driver can also rate the rider – a little-known fact).
1. Are you a marketplace? How are you bringing demand and supply
together?
2. Are you for profit or mission driven?
3. Are you a corporate-driven or a collaboratively governed business?
4. Are you peer-to-peer (Uber), business-to-business (Hilti), business-to-
crowd (Kickstarter)?
5. Economic benefits
6. Asset ownership and asset management
7. Distribution model (esp for durable/physical goods)
8. Transaction costs
9. Customer experience, quality
10. Self-regulating mechanisms (e.g. a fake-proof review system)
11. Footprint/impact on existing businesses, workforces, environment,
laws, etc
12. Local & geographic aspects
Platform business models are capital-light and can use more of their
funding for customer acquisition, brand building and so on. Uber, for
example, has used about $2b in customer acquisition in China alone. And
even this was too much of an ask for their investors. Realising this is not a
sustainable, they have pulled out of what once seemed to be their biggest
potential market. At the end, they settled for a 20% share of the largest
Chinese ride-hailing company, Didi.
In any case, it is not surprising that Uber and Airbnb have a significantly
faster growth trajectory than say Zipcar who are one of the most successful
carsharing companies. And even if they lease their cars (which they do to a
certain degree), they get to pay for the cost of ownership (depreciation,
maintenance costs, etc) in the lease rates. Thus it makes no material
difference to owning a car (other than possibly in the cost of capital which
may be lower for the lessor than for a start-up). JVs with a manufacturer
could bring capital costs down as well but it will never be close to what the
Uber’s and Airbnb’s can achieve.
At the bottom of this article you can download the sharing platform
business model value chain which shows all the considerations
above (and more) in one inforgraphic.
Your opportunity
There are four ways to benefit from this knowledge if you are working in an
established company: