Scoot Networks

Last updated
Scoot Rides
Company type Subsidiary
Industry Public transport
Founded2011;13 years ago (2011)
FounderMichael Keating, Matt Ewing and Dan Riegel
Headquarters,
United States
Area served
San Francisco Bay Area, Santiago and Barcelona
Key people
Michael Keating (former CEO & president)
ServicesPublic electric scooter sharing systems
Parent Bird Global
Website scoot.co
Scoot Networks Cargo scooter, Classic scooter, and Quad electric car. Scoot cargo classic quad.jpg
Scoot Networks Cargo scooter, Classic scooter, and Quad electric car.

Scoot Networks, also known as just Scoot or Scoot Rides, is an American company which provides public electric scooter and electric bicycle sharing systems. The company is based in San Francisco, California.

Contents

History

Scoot was founded in 2011 by Michael Keating. In 2012 he was joined by co-founders Matt Ewing (CCO), and Dan Riegel (CTO). [1] [2] Keating, Scoot's CEO, had a background in transportation software and urban planning, Ewing previously worked with MoveOn advocacy group, and Riegel was a co-founder of EnergyHub. [2]

The company was the first to offer electric vehicle rentals through a smartphone app. [3]

By September 2012, the company had raised $775,000 from investors including Lisa Gansky and Greenstart. [4] [5]

The company opened its service to public beta in San Francisco on September 26, 2012, with 10 electric motor scooters. [4] Their fleet expanded to 50 in late 2012. [4]

In 2014 the company introduced motor scooters with batteries that could be swapped at the curb by a technician in order to recharge the scooters without plugging them in. This enabled customers to end their rental by parking the scooter at the curb rather than in a garage with a power outlet - so called "free floating" vehicle sharing. This began a process that led to SFMTA issuing the world's first on-street parking permit for free-floating electric two-wheelers. [6]

In August 2015 Scoot expanded its fleet to more than 400 with the addition of cargo scooters from German manufacturer GOVECS. [7] The larger vehicles were intended to accommodate larger riders and couriers who rented them to make deliveries.

In October 2015, Scoot added electric mini-cars to its sharing service in partnership with Nissan and Renault. Marketed as Scoot Quads, the cars were Renault Twizy heavy quadracycles available for the first time in the United States as a pilot project. [8]

By July 7, 2016, Scoot motor scooters had collectively accumulated over 1,000,000 miles of riding. [9]

In 2016, the company received additional funding, primarily from Mahindra Partners and Vision Ridge Capital, for a new fleet of hundreds of electric motor scooters by GenZe. [9] [10] In June 2017, the company added Kunal Bhasin on the executive team as CTO to scale technology and product.

In November 2017, indicated its intentions to expand and include additional cities beyond San Francisco. [11]

The company expanded to Barcelona in May 2018 with 500 electric motorbikes and the addition of bike sharing to its services with 1,000 electric bikes. [12] [13]

The company expanded to Santiago, Chile in October 2018 with electric stand-on scooters and later electric bicycles. [14]

In October 2018, Scoot and competitor Skip were the only two companies granted permits by the City of San Francisco to operate shared, electric stand-on scooters in the city. [15]

In July, 2019, after serving hundreds of thousands of riders with millions of rides, Scoot and its 200 employees were acquired by Bird, a competitor, for an undisclosed value. Scoot Rides became a wholly owned subsidiary of Bird. [16] [17] In December 2023, Bird filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company has plans to restructure and sell some of its assets to some of its existing lenders. [18]

Services

GenZe 2.0 Electric Scooter utilized by Scoot Network fleet Scoot in San Francisco - May 2018 (1300).jpg
GenZe 2.0 Electric Scooter utilized by Scoot Network fleet

Scoot provides an online network for sharing electric scooters, electric bikes, electric motorbikes, and electric cars, [1] [9] [12] which are also owned and maintained by the company. [4] [5] The service has been referred to by the media as the "Zipcar for scooters". [4] [5] Unlike Zipcar, most Scoot vehicles are used for short, one-way trips within the city, typically under 20 minutes and under 4 miles in distance. They are usually parked on the street throughout the city rather than in specific garages, and are accessed through a smartphone app rather than an RFID card.

In August 2018, the company was also chosen as one of the providers of San Francisco's scooter-sharing system using dockless electric kick scooters. [19]

In August 2019, Los Angeles Times criticized the company for not providing services to the residents of Tenderloin and Chinatown. [20] The San Francisco Examiner reported that neighborhood residents had requested that Scoot not offer service on especially crowded blocks of their neighborhoods. [21]

The service utilizes GPS to track the vehicles. [4] Riders of scooters are required to have a valid driver's license, but not a motorcycle license. [4] [9] Riders are provided insurance by Scoot Networks. [4] Each motor scooter has helmets stored in their cargo bin for the rider's usage. [4]

Scoot electric motorbikes in Barcelona. Barcelona motos scoot networks.jpg
Scoot electric motorbikes in Barcelona.
Scoot electric kick scooter in Santiago de Chile. Santiago kick scoot networks.jpg
Scoot electric kick scooter in Santiago de Chile.
Scoot Networks e-bikes in Barcelona. Scoot Networks ebikes Barcelona.jpg
Scoot Networks e-bikes in Barcelona.

Pricing

The prices of the most popular products are as following, currently as of October 2018 (in US-Dollars):

Target audience

The target audience is 18- 45-year-old users, who have access to the scoot mobile app via their smartphone.

Operations

Scoot Rides' headquarters are located in San Francisco, California. Scoot directly employed over 100 people in San Francisco, including engineers, designers, mechanics, customer service staff, and managers. [1] Scoot's European headquarters was in Barcelona where the company employed more than 50 managers, marketers, customer service staff, mechanics, and other technicians. [22] Scoot's Latin America headquarters was in Santiago, Chile where the company employed more than 30 managers, marketers, customer service staff, and technicians.

Fleet

In San Francisco, Scoot Rides utilized electric scooters made by several different manufactures including GOVECS and GenZe, [23] a company owned by the Mahindra Group, whose private-equity business, Mahindra Partners, has invested in Scoot. [24] [25] The company also offered quadracycles from Renault and various electric stand-scooters before being acquired by Bird and switching to Bird's scooters.

In Barcelona, the company utilized electric scooters by Spanish company Silence and electric bicycles made for the company by Taioku. [12]

Scoot Quads charging. Scoot quads charging.jpg
Scoot Quads charging.

In Santiago the company offered electric scooters and electric bicycles.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zipcar</span> American car-sharing brand

Zipcar is an American car-sharing company and a subsidiary of Avis Budget Group. Zipcar provides vehicle reservations to its members, billable by the minute, hour or day; members may have to pay a monthly or annual membership fee in addition to car reservations charges. Gas, maintenance, insurance options, and a dedicated parking spot are included. Zipcar was founded in 2000 by Antje Danielson and Robin Chase.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kick scooter</span> Human-powered land vehicle

A kick scooter is a human-powered street vehicle with a handlebar, deck, and wheels propelled by a rider pushing off the ground with their leg. Today the most common scooters are made of aluminum, titanium, and steel. Some kick scooters made for younger children have 3 to 4 wheels and are made of plastic and do not fold. High-performance kickbikes are also made. A company that had once made the Razor Scooters revitalized the design in the mid-nineties and early two-thousands. Three-wheel models where the frame forks into two decks are known as Y scooters or trikkes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Motorized scooter</span> Powered stand-up scooter

A motorized scooter is a stand-up scooter powered by either a small internal combustion engine or electric hub motor in its front and/or rear wheel. Classified as a form of micro-mobility, they are generally designed with a large center deck on which the rider stands. The first motorized scooter was manufactured by Autoped in 1915.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Flyscooters</span>

Flyscooters, formerly known under the name Znen, was an American company that marketed gas-powered motor scooters manufactured in China and Taiwan. The company was founded in 2006 in Florida by scooter enthusiasts Leon Li and Daniel Pak, and ceased operations in 2010. During the operating life of the company, Flyscooters' basic business model was to import low-cost scooters from abroad and distribute them under the Fly brand name to a network of retail scooter dealerships across the United States, providing dealers with warranty and spare parts support.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shared transport</span> Demand-driven vehicle-sharing arrangement

Shared transport or shared mobility is a transportation system where travelers share a vehicle either simultaneously as a group or over time as personal rental, and in the process share the cost of the journey, thus purportedly creating a hybrid between private vehicle use and mass or public transport. It is a transportation strategy that allows users to access transportation services on an as-needed basis. Shared mobility is an umbrella term that encompasses a variety of transportation modes including carsharing, Bicycle-sharing systems, ridesharing companies, carpools, and microtransit.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Turo (company)</span> American peer-to-peer car rental company

Turo is an American peer-to-peer carsharing company based in San Francisco, United States. The company allows private car owners to rent out their vehicles via an online and mobile interface in five countries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bay Wheels</span>

Bay Wheels is a regional public bicycle sharing system in California's San Francisco Bay Area. It is operated by Motivate in a partnership with the Metropolitan Transportation Commission and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District. Bay Wheels is the first regional and large-scale bicycle sharing system deployed in California and on the West Coast of the United States. It was established as Bay Area Bike Share in August 2013. As of January 2018, the Bay Wheels system had over 2,600 bicycles in 262 stations across San Francisco, East Bay and San Jose.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">GOVECS</span>

GOVECS AG, headquartered in Munich, Germany, manufactures a variety of electric vehicles distributed under its own brand or developed and produced for other brands. Production of all vehicles takes place in the company's own factory in Wroclaw, Poland. The main product line is one of electric scooters marketed to private users as well as to fleet operators, such as delivery services, in a transport version under the GOVECS GO! brand. The company markets its GOVECS GO! electric scooters in the US and 17 European countries. The core markets are Germany, France, Spain, and Portugal, as well as the Benelux countries.

Gogoro is a Taiwanese company that developed a battery-swapping refueling platform for urban electric two-wheel scooters, mopeds and motorcycles. It also develops its own line of electric scooters and offers its own vehicle innovations to vehicle maker partners like Hero, Yamaha, Aeonmotor, PGO, eReady, and eMOVING. Gogoro also operates GoShare, a rideshare service, in Taiwan and Ishigaki Island in Japan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gig Car Share</span>

GIG Car Share is a carsharing service in parts of the San Francisco Bay Area, Sacramento, and Seattle, created by A3 Ventures. The company operates a fleet of Toyota Prius Hybrid vehicles and all-electric Chevrolet Bolts. It offers one-way point-to-point rentals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lime (transportation company)</span> American micromobility company

Neutron Holdings, Inc., doing business under the name Lime, formerly LimeBike, is a transportation company based in San Francisco, California. It runs electric scooters, electric bikes and electric mopeds in various cities around the world. The system offers dockless vehicles that users find and unlock via a smartphone app that knows the location of available vehicles via GPS.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Spin (company)</span>

Spin is an electric bicycle-sharing and electric scooter-sharing company. It is based in San Francisco and was founded as a start-up in 2017, launching as a dockless bicycle-sharing system controlled by a mobile app for reservations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jump (transportation company)</span>

Jump was a dockless scooter and electric bicycle sharing system operating in the United States, New Zealand, Canada, France, Germany, Portugal, the United Kingdom, Mexico and Australia. The bikes were a bright red orange and weighed 70 pounds (32 kg). Riders unlocked bikes using the Uber app and were charged to their Uber account.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">GenZe (company)</span>

Mahindra GenZe, doing business as GenZe and also known as GenZe by Mahindra, was a brand of electric bicycles and scooters. It was a subsidiary of the Mahindra Group of India.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bird Global</span> Dockless scooter-sharing provider

Bird Global, Inc. is a micromobility company based in Miami, Florida. Founded in September 2017, Bird has distributed electric scooters designed for short-term rental to over 400 cities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Scooter-sharing system</span> Service for short-term scooter rentals

A scooter-sharing system is a shared transport service in which electric motorized scooters are made available to use for short-term rentals. E-scooters are typically "dockless", meaning that they do not have a fixed home location and are dropped off and picked up from certain locations in the service area.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gotcha (company)</span> American bicycle sharing company

The Gotcha Group LLC, doing business as Gotcha, is an electric bike and scooter-sharing company based in Charleston, South Carolina. Gotcha began operating bike share systems on college campuses in the United States and later expanded to scooter-sharing and other electric vehicles such as electric trike scooters.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Micromobility</span> Modes of transport involving very light vehicles

Micromobility refers to a range of small, lightweight vehicles operating at speeds typically below 25 km/h (15 mph) and driven by users personally. Micromobility devices include bicycles, e-bikes, electric scooters, electric skateboards, shared bicycle fleets, and electric pedal assisted (pedelec) bicycles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Helbiz</span>

Helbiz, Inc. is an Italian-American intra-urban transportation company headquartered in New York City with an aim to solve the first mile/last mile transportation problem of high-traffic urban areas around the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Revel Transit</span> Electric moped sharing company

Revel was a dockless electric moped sharing startup based in New York City. Founded in 2018 by Frank Reig and Paul Suhey, it first started with a small pilot program in New York, later growing its fleet size in New York and expanding into Washington, D.C., Miami, and San Francisco. Having pulled out of Washington and Miami in 2022, Revel announced in November 2023 that it would end operation of its mopeds and focus on its electric-vehicle taxi service and its vehicle charging stations.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Scoot Networks, Inc.: Private Company Information - Bloomberg". www.bloomberg.com. Retrieved 2018-05-27.
  2. 1 2 Perez, Sarah (September 12, 2012). "Scoot, The "Zipcar For Scooters," Grabs $550K In Seed Funding". TechCrunch . Retrieved October 9, 2019.
  3. US 10086796,Keating, Michael; Passmore, J. Loren& Russo, Peter R.,"Systems and methods for regulating vehicle access",published 2018-10-02, assigned to Scoot Networks Inc.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Lawler, Ryan (2012-09-26). ""Zipcar For Scooters" Startup Scoot Networks Launches To The Public In San Francisco". TechCrunch . Retrieved 2018-05-27.
  5. 1 2 3 Michelsen, Charis (2012-03-12). "Scoot Networks is the Zipcar of Electric Scooters". cleantechnica.com. Retrieved 2018-05-27.
  6. fpadmin (2017-06-13). "Up for Approval: A New Type of Parking Permit for Shared E-Mopeds". SFMTA. Retrieved 2020-09-30.
  7. "Scoot's New Cargo Line Of Scooters Can Carry Taller People And More Stuff". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  8. Balise, Julie (2015-10-17). "Scoot Networks adds electric cars to fleet of shared vehicles". SFChronicle.com. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Shahan, Cynthia (2016-07-07). "Scoot Networks Expanding With GenZe Electric Scooters -- 1,000,000 Zero-Emission Miles To Date". cleantechnica.com. Retrieved 2018-05-27.
  10. "Mahindra Partners funds US urban mobility firm Scoot Networks". Livemint . June 28, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2019.
  11. Thadani, Trisha (2017-11-30). "Scoot Networks plans expansion of electric scooter rentals to Barcelona". San Francisco Chronicle . Retrieved 2018-05-27.
  12. 1 2 3 Baldwin, Roberto (2018-05-30). "Scoot adds a bike-sharing service as it expands to Barcelona". Engadget . Retrieved 2018-06-04.
  13. Kokalitcheva, Kia (May 30, 2018). "Scoot is expanding to Spain and adding bikes". Axios . Retrieved October 12, 2019.
  14. "Scoot brings electric scooter rentals to Santiago, Chile". Engadget. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  15. "Scooters to return to SF; Scoot, Skip picked as Lyft, Uber spurned". SFChronicle.com. 2018-08-31. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  16. Dean, Sam; Bhuiyan, Johana (2019-06-12). "Bird buys Scoot — and a back door into San Francisco's rental scooter market". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 2019-06-13.
  17. Abril, Danielle (2019-06-12). "Bird Buys Competitor Scoot, Further Consolidating the Crowded Scooter-Rental Market". Fortune . Retrieved 2019-06-13.
  18. "Bird Electric Scooter Company Files for Bankruptcy After 2021 SPAC". The Wall Street Journal. December 20, 2023. Retrieved December 20, 2023.
  19. Said, Carolyn (August 30, 2018). "Scooters to return to SF; Scoot, Skip picked as Lyft, Uber spurned". San Francisco Chronicle . Retrieved August 30, 2018.
  20. Bhuiyan, Johana (August 16, 2019). "Scooter start-up promised to serve a whole city. Then it cut out two poor areas". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved October 9, 2019.
  21. "Did Scoot 'redline' SF neighborhoods? Chinatown group says 'we asked for it'". The San Francisco Examiner. 2019-08-16. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  22. Rolandi, Alex. "Californian electric vehicle sharing company sets up Barcelona base". www.catalannews.com. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  23. Zart, Nicholas (2017-07-18). "GenZe E-Scooter Partners With Postmates". cleantechnica.com. Retrieved 2018-05-17.
  24. Balakrishnan, Paran (2017-10-31). "Racing down new roads". Business Line . Retrieved 2018-05-17.
  25. Rai, Nayantara (2018-02-17). "Government creating aspiration for electric mobility: Anand Mahindra". The Economic Times . Retrieved 2018-05-17.