Have you ever had a humbling ‘foot in the mouth’ moment?
I sure have. It happened a couple of years ago when I first heard about a service, a smartphone app, aiming to fundamentally alter the taxi industry.
I was at a monthly dinner with a dozen venture capitalists and angel investors. After a few glasses of cabernet, when we were going around the table to talk about exciting or harebrained ideas we’d recently come across, I stood up to blast holes through this new taxi idea.
I ranted to my colleagues that the idea was impossible to execute and bound to fail. Trying to break into regulated markets like transportation, I said, is like sticking needles in your eye. And beyond that, in my mind, nobody would ever use or pay extra for a service like this – especially in places like New York City, where yellow taxis dot the road at all hours.
Fast-forward a few months to a bitterly cold and rainy night. I’d just ducked out of a steakhouse and was standing on the corner of 49th and Lexington Avenue, drenched, trying to hail a cab. The wind was howling, my loafers were soaked and there wasn’t an empty yellow cab in sight. Desperate, I pulled out my iPhone and clicked on the very same taxi app I’d verbally torn apart only a few months prior.
And what do you know: Within four minutes, my opinion of the product and the company changed.
Because within four minutes I was sitting in the back seat of a Lincoln Navigator, hot air blowing at me from my personally controlled vents. I’d been able to track the position of the car on my phone while I waited inside the warm, dry steakhouse, so I knew exactly when it would be at the curb. Sure, it cost a few dollars more than a yellow cab, but the overall experience was fantastic. Now I use the service constantly.
The service is Uber. And since the night of my foot-in-the-mouth remarks, the company has grown like a weed, making a huge dent in the taxi industry. In fact, the company recently raised over $250 million from Google at an eye-popping $3.5 billion valuation.
Given this company’s humble beginnings – and my initial scepticism – I’ve become open to the idea of small, private companies ‘disrupting’ (that’s geek-speak for fundamentally changing) regulated and public-sector industries.
In fact, there’s a company raising money on AngelList right now that’s looking to disrupt mass transit. In fact, it could become the ‘Uber of mass transit’…
The top 20 US markets for mass transit cater to 2.2 billion riders per year. Even at a few dollars in revenue per ride, whoever succeeds in capturing this market could become a billion-dollar company.
The company I’m referring to on AngelList is called Leap Transit.
They launched a trial in San Francisco. Within four months, they registered over 4,000 members, provided rides to over 2,300 people, and are already generating revenue.
Based on the size of the market opportunity and the results of the test, the company attracted the attention of famed venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (early backers of Facebook and Twitter) as well as Ron Conway’s SV Angel fund (early investors in Google). They’re both investing in this round of financing.
Leap essentially operates its own fleet of buses, much like Uber operates a fleet of cabs. That might sound dull at first blush, but the way Leap leverages technology is downright innovative and exciting.
For one thing, there won’t be any standardised routes or schedules. The bus routes will be crowdsourced – meaning, the service will intelligently generate new routes based on riders’ pickup locations and destinations. So if you and dozens of other people live in the same area and are all headed downtown, the bus will automatically generate the most optimal route and pickup schedule.
And like Uber, Leap will allow you to check arrival times and track the current location of the bus right from your mobile phone. So no more wondering when your bus will arrive, wondering where it is or running to the stop in a panic.
On top of that, the buses have comfortable seating, air conditioning and free Wi-Fi, so you can work or relax while in transit. We believe Leap Transit has the makings of a successful company…and a successful investment.
The company is currently raising $2 million on AngelList and, as mentioned, already has some high-profile investors involved.
The valuation is $4 million. Given the opportunity size, the company’s progress so far and the skills of their management team, we believe that’s an attractive figure.
Wayne Mulligan,
Contributing Writer, Money Morning
Ed Note: The Coming Leap in Mass Transit originally appeared in The Daily Reckoning USA