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NuRide promotes carpooling by offering rewards to commuters
by Heather
Hayes
for Virginia Business
September 2006
Turns out that being green can actually be easy and profitable.
Commuters in the Washington, D.C., area can cut their
gas bills and do their part to save the environment by
simply logging on to a Web site and arranging a shared
ride to work. If the commuters do it often enough, NuRide
Inc., the Reston-based company that created the system,
will compensate them with gift certificates, gift cards
and other rewards provided by local corporate sponsors. “We’re
kind of like Expedia for ground transportation, only
with a little eBay thrown into the mix,” says Rick
Steele, the CEO of NuRide, which has 14 employees.
The ride-sharing service is free to
commuters, who are recruited through their companies.
They earn “redeemable” miles
for each ride-sharing trip. The system even allows “NuRiders” to
rate ride-share companions and post comments.
The concept was created by Steele and
four other IT entrepreneurs (including John Milliken,
a former Virginia secretary
of transportation). They believed that the Internet
was the key to overcoming the limitations of carpooling,
which has been declining since the 1970s. Carpools
generally
involve the same people taking the same daily trip. “We
felt that people needed a flexible system that they could
use once a week, once a month or whenever they felt like
it and with different people on different days,” says
Steele. “Ultimately, we wanted it to be as easy
for them to share a ride as it was to drive alone.”
The idea appears to be working. Since starting in the
Washington area in 2004, NuRide has expanded to New York
City and Houston and has a total of 16,000 commuter members
and more than 60 corporate sponsors, including Chevron,
Austin Grill, Old Navy and TGI Friday.
To encourage even more participation
from both commuters and sponsors, NuRide has undertaken
a number of highly
publicized “road races.” In February, for
example, company officials kicked off the Chevron 5,000,000
Mile Rideshare Challenge in the Washington area in
hopes of eliminating 5 million miles of unneeded trips
and
2,100 tons of emissions. As of July 1, Steele says,
drivers had already logged 1.4 million miles.
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