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#22
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Robin9 wrote:
'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: ;158096']Robin9 wrote:- 'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: - ;158092']Robin9 wrote:- 'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: - ;158072']Robin9 wrote:- tim...;158053 Wrote: - came into my in box via my linkedin account https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/uber-...jared-carmel-2 posted without comment (for now) tim --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus- Interesting. What surprises me is that Uber is deemed to be losing money hand over fist. Not making enough profit to provide investers with a satisfactory return is one thing. Actually making a substantial loss is another. As Uber's drivers are paid only a percentage of what customers are charged, in London at least the business must show a profit before overheads are included. Are Uber's overheads far too high?- Uber's overheads are famously low. Why do you think Uber is making a profit in London? It doesn't even make a profit in the US. - If Uber can't make a profit before overheads are included, they must be grossly incompetent. Remember how the London minicab trade works. The driver is deemed to be self-employed, and pays for the car, insurance and petrol himself. The customer pays Uber by credit card and Uber pays a small percentage to the driver. As Uber seems to have taken a huge share of the market away from both Hackney cabs and minicabs, the number of jobs per day must be in the thousands. Multiply that number of jobs by an average net revenue of, say, five pounds and you arrive at a gross income which must be more than the cost of a minimal office set-up.- Uber is investing in market growth. That's where the big money goes. So it subsidies drivers to get into new markets, and spends a lot on marketing. I dare say it spends a lot on political lobbying as well. The really big losses were in China, but that's now stopped, so from now on, the losses should taper. But it's still fighting competitive battles in many markets, so bottom line profits will remain illusive. It also seems to be spending a lot on driverless technologies, as it expects these to be cheaper than drivers within a few years. But that means it will need to invest in the cars.- I'm discussing the situation in London, and there is no indication that Uber are subsidising their drivers here. I am sceptical that they do anywhere, and I'm not persuaded merely because it is stated on the Internet. I'd like someone who believes that Uber are subsidising their drivers to explain in detail how this is done.- Google is your friend: http://tinyurl.com/zrtmng4 http://tinyurl.com/h4a9dz4 http://tinyurl.com/grxowog http://tinyurl.com/j3fknwr http://tinyurl.com/meu2elv http://tinyurl.com/zrfhsdl http://tinyurl.com/pyo4b3m http://tinyurl.com/zk2hg4u http://tinyurl.com/h7aac2h Google is not my friend and none of those links will change that. In other words, your mind is made up, regardless of the evidence. Not one persuaded me that Uber are genuinely subsidising their drivers anywhere, least of all in London. It is clear from those links that the idea of Uber's losses arising from subsidies to drivers came from their financial director, Guatam Gupta, who seems to have made no attempt to substantiate the contention. As is the way of the Internet, those unquantified assertions have been repeated by people who are trying to pretend that they have done original research and are in possession of confidential information. It looks like you've not read many of the links then. There is also the issue of semantics. Some of those links show people confused by the differences between a subsidy, a guarantee and a loss-leading market strategy. What confusion? Uber often pays its drivers more than the usual 80% of the fare the customer paid. That's a driver subsidy, which hits Uber's bottom line. It doesn't matter why Uber chooses to do it. In the UK, new customers get a £15 discount. That's paid by Uber, not the driver. In other words, a driver subsidy: https://www.list.co.uk/offer/2097-ge...jor-uk-cities/ https://www.vouchercodes.co.uk/uber.com So do you still maintain that "there is no indication that Uber are subsidising their drivers here. I am sceptical that they do anywhere, and I'm not persuaded merely because it is stated on the Internet"? And if you disregard everything you read on the internet, what are you doing here? |
#23
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![]() Quote:
is that I'm trying to learn the mind-set of people who do believe everything they read on the Internet. The point you seem to have missed is that all those links are repeating and elaborating on an assertion made by someone who has a vested interest in propagating the idea that Uber are subsidising drivers. Can you find anywhere a confirmation by a driver that they are being subsidised? Can you find any verification that the calculations quoted are valid? Another point you seem to be overlooking is that Uber now find it necessary to advertise regularly for drivers on LBC and on the Internet. Why do they? Almost certainly because they are losing drivers. If drivers are being subsidised and/or paid 80% of the fare paid, why are they leaving Uber? Why do so many phone-in programs on the radio have drivers complain that they can't make a living working with Uber? |
#24
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On Mon, Sep 19, 2016 at 03:10:42PM +0100, tim... wrote:
spending billions on trying to win a market of millions is just silly Becoming the default choice for taxi services throughout the developed world (which is what they seem to be going for) is not worth mere millions. What they're doing is very similar to what Amazon did early on. They consistently lost money for the first few years, and only occasionally made a profit since. It's only very recently that they started to make vaguely reliable looking profits. Amazon spent those profitless years buying the market. -- David Cantrell | Reality Engineer, Ministry of Information Cum catapultae proscriptae erunt tum soli proscript catapultas habebunt |
#25
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#26
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On Wed, 21 Sep 2016 15:34:22 +0100
David Cantrell wrote: On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 03:17:06PM +0000, d wrote: Only people who only ever lived in a city flat would think renting a car on an as-you-need-it basis is a viable model for family life out in the sticks. There is an implicit "most" between "where" and "people". Obviously there will still be a small market for people with their own cars, just like there is a small market today for people who use horses, Cars were an enormous improvement on horses. Renting a car is zero improvement upon owning one unless you have nowhere to park it or can't afford to buy one. There are plenty of places to rent cars at the moment but do you see people replacing their own cars with rentals or just using taxis? No. And just because in the future a car might be able to drive itself will make zero difference to that. -- Spud |
#27
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Robin9 wrote:
'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: ;158116']Robin9 wrote:- 'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: - ;158096']Robin9 wrote:- 'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: - ;158092']Robin9 wrote:- 'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: - ;158072']Robin9 wrote:- tim...;158053 Wrote: - came into my in box via my linkedin account https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/uber-...jared-carmel-2 posted without comment (for now) tim --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus- Interesting. What surprises me is that Uber is deemed to be losing money hand over fist. Not making enough profit to provide investers with a satisfactory return is one thing. Actually making a substantial loss is another. As Uber's drivers are paid only a percentage of what customers are charged, in London at least the business must show a profit before overheads are included. Are Uber's overheads far too high?- Uber's overheads are famously low. Why do you think Uber is making a profit in London? It doesn't even make a profit in the US. - If Uber can't make a profit before overheads are included, they must be grossly incompetent. Remember how the London minicab trade works. The driver is deemed to be self-employed, and pays for the car, insurance and petrol himself. The customer pays Uber by credit card and Uber pays a small percentage to the driver. As Uber seems to have taken a huge share of the market away from both Hackney cabs and minicabs, the number of jobs per day must be in the thousands. Multiply that number of jobs by an average net revenue of, say, five pounds and you arrive at a gross income which must be more than the cost of a minimal office set-up.- Uber is investing in market growth. That's where the big money goes. So it subsidies drivers to get into new markets, and spends a lot on marketing. I dare say it spends a lot on political lobbying as well. The really big losses were in China, but that's now stopped, so from now on, the losses should taper. But it's still fighting competitive battles in many markets, so bottom line profits will remain illusive. It also seems to be spending a lot on driverless technologies, as it expects these to be cheaper than drivers within a few years. But that means it will need to invest in the cars.- I'm discussing the situation in London, and there is no indication that Uber are subsidising their drivers here. I am sceptical that they do anywhere, and I'm not persuaded merely because it is stated on the Internet. I'd like someone who believes that Uber are subsidising their drivers to explain in detail how this is done.- Google is your friend: http://tinyurl.com/zrtmng4 http://tinyurl.com/h4a9dz4 http://tinyurl.com/grxowog http://tinyurl.com/j3fknwr http://tinyurl.com/meu2elv http://tinyurl.com/zrfhsdl http://tinyurl.com/pyo4b3m http://tinyurl.com/zk2hg4u http://tinyurl.com/h7aac2h- Google is not my friend and none of those links will change that. - In other words, your mind is made up, regardless of the evidence. - Not one persuaded me that Uber are genuinely subsidising their drivers anywhere, least of all in London. It is clear from those links that the idea of Uber's losses arising from subsidies to drivers came from their financial director, Guatam Gupta, who seems to have made no attempt to substantiate the contention. As is the way of the Internet, those unquantified assertions have been repeated by people who are trying to pretend that they have done original research and are in possession of confidential information. - It looks like you've not read many of the links then. - There is also the issue of semantics. Some of those links show people confused by the differences between a subsidy, a guarantee and a loss-leading market strategy.- What confusion? Uber often pays its drivers more than the usual 80% of the fare the customer paid. That's a driver subsidy, which hits Uber's bottom line. It doesn't matter why Uber chooses to do it. In the UK, new customers get a £15 discount. That's paid by Uber, not the driver. In other words, a driver subsidy: http://tinyurl.com/z5hsuer https://www.vouchercodes.co.uk/uber.com So do you still maintain that "there is no indication that Uber are subsidising their drivers here. I am sceptical that they do anywhere, and I'm not persuaded merely because it is stated on the Internet"? And if you disregard everything you read on the internet, what are you doing here? The facetious answer to your ill-mannered question is that I'm trying to learn the mind-set of people who do believe everything they read on the Internet. And it appears that you only believe things on the internet if they are things you believed already. If you didn't already believe it, you believe it must be a lie. So, I ask again, why are you here? You're not going to believe anything you don't already believe, so reading all these lies must be very tedious for you. The point you seem to have missed is that all those links are repeating and elaborating on an assertion made by someone who has a vested interest in propagating the idea that Uber are subsidising drivers. Can you find anywhere a confirmation by a driver that they are being subsidised? How would they even know? The customer pays Uber directly. Can you find any verification that the calculations quoted are valid? Why should I? You're the one doubting everything, with no evidence to support your assertions. Disprove it yourself, if you can. Simply saying you disbelieve everything you don't like doesn't count. Another point you seem to be overlooking is that Uber now find it necessary to advertise regularly for drivers on LBC and on the Internet. Why do they? Almost certainly because they are losing drivers. You seem to have forgotten that Uber is growing as fast as possible. That's why it constantly advertises for both drivers and customers. Undoubtedly there will be significant driver turnover, but even if there wasn't, Uber would still be advertising for more drivers. If drivers are being subsidised and/or paid 80% of the fare paid, why are they leaving Uber? Why do so many phone-in programs on the radio have drivers complain that they can't make a living working with Uber? Obviously some can't. That doesn't mean that others don't. But just because Uber feels the need to sometimes subside drivers doesn't mean that they're well paid. Uber has a policy of reducing fares to gain market share, which hurts driver income. Uber sometimes subsidises drivrs to reduce this effect. In any case, no-one has said that Uber always subsidises drivers, just that it does so often enough to make hefty losses. This was particularly the case in China, but that source of losses has now ceased. Incidentally, the normal payment to drivers is 80% of the fare. It's a subsidy when driver payments are more than that, for example when Uber gives introductory discounts to new customers without cutting driver payments. It's also a subsidy if drivers are guaranteed a certain level of business, but the drivers may not see it that way. But of course you won't accept any of this as you didn't believe it already. |
#28
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![]() "Robin9" wrote in message ... Another point you seem to be overlooking is that Uber now find it necessary to advertise regularly for drivers on LBC and on the Internet. Why do they? Almost certainly because they are losing drivers. If drivers are being subsidised and/or paid 80% of the fare paid, why are they leaving Uber? Why do so many phone-in programs on the radio have drivers complain that they can't make a living working with Uber? Because they aren't subsidising London anymore. It is now a mature market (FSVO). It is (subset of) RoW that gets the subsidies. tim |
#29
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![]() On 21/09/2016 19:09, tim... wrote: "Robin9" wrote: Another point you seem to be overlooking is that Uber now find it necessary to advertise regularly for drivers on LBC and on the Internet. Why do they? Almost certainly because they are losing drivers. If drivers are being subsidised and/or paid 80% of the fare paid, why are they leaving Uber? Why do so many phone-in programs on the radio have drivers complain that they can't make a living working with Uber? Because they aren't subsidising London anymore. It is now a mature market (FSVO). It is (subset of) RoW that gets the subsidies. FWIW, Uber runs a v successful referral scheme - I think currently in London it's £15 credit for the new customer, £10 for the referrer (only valid on one journey though). |
#30
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tim... wrote:
"Robin9" wrote in message ... Another point you seem to be overlooking is that Uber now find it necessary to advertise regularly for drivers on LBC and on the Internet. Why do they? Almost certainly because they are losing drivers. If drivers are being subsidised and/or paid 80% of the fare paid, why are they leaving Uber? Why do so many phone-in programs on the radio have drivers complain that they can't make a living working with Uber? Because they aren't subsidising London anymore. It is now a mature market (FSVO). It is (subset of) RoW that gets the subsidies. Here's another part of the Uber business model: leasing cars to drivers. It's not quite a subsidy, but it looks like Uber just about breaks even on it. It's another way of maximising the supply of drivers, many of whom are immigrants without enough credit history to buy new enough cars themselves: http://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/07/uber-...-industry.html |
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