Mobility is Dead; Long Live Mobility

Mobility is Dead; Long Live Mobility

What the hell is going on in the automotive industry.?Every automotive executive is talking mobility, mobility, mobility while simultaneously divesting every mobility asset that has been amassed over the past 10 years of surging mobility mania.

The latest spinoff of a mobility asset was Volkswagen’s sale of its WeShare car sharing operation to Berlin-based Miles Mobility.?The move was a bit of a shock given Volkswagen’s build up of autonomous vehicle technology with its Ford-Argo.ai joint venture; its Moia demand-responsive transit solution; and even its acquisition of Europcar car rental operations.

According to the terms of the MILES deal:

  • Volkswagen WeShare has been acquired by MILES Mobility and will be integrated into the car sharing company’s portfolio
  • WeShare customers will “benefit” from offerings in eight German cities
  • Volkswagen will deliver 10,000 all-electric vehicles to MILES from 2023
  • MILES Mobility will be integrated into Volkswagen’s mobility platform

Volkswagen looked ready to bring its unique brand of mobility to the world on a scale comparable to its world-leading vehicle sales.?But, no, Volkswagen stepped back from its Argo.ai self-driving venture with Ford Motor Company and now WeShare has been banished leaving Moia and Europcar and ambitious mobility visions in tatters.

To be fair, VW’s WeShare was up against both MILES, an aggressively expanding upstart, and SIXT a global car rental leader with overwhelming resources, infrastructure, and marketing muscle.?Maybe it’s not so much of a shock that VW folded its mobility tent.?An important wrinkle, of course, is the fact that VW was up against B2C partners with greater expertise and ability to communicate and interact directly with consumers – not a strength at VW, a traditional car making B2B operator selling cars through dealers.

Volkswagen is not alone.?The company has simply joined the conga line of car companies shimmying their way out of mobility from BMW and Mercedes Benz selling Share Now to Stellantis to GM’s laying off Maven car sharing.?(The Maven brand lives on, kind of.)

But the list of mobility ventures shuttered or sold off is long – maybe too long – to list here.?One of the most recent was Ford’s off-loading of its TransLoc demand responsive transit operation to Modaxo earlier this year.?TransLoc was a large, nationwide operation managing hundreds of millions of rides for hundreds of operators – but Ford turned in a different direction.

Ford has been a leader in abandoning mobility acquisitions, start ups, and trial programs.?Nothing has seemed to stick – which has been the way at most auto makers.

The post-mortems on these ventures usually reveals a reassessment by bean counters proclaiming the obvious – that the operations were unprofitable.?The pulling of the plug comes next.

And then there were four or maybe more??Renault (Mobilize), Stellantis (FreeToMove), Hyundai (Mocean), and Toyota (Kinto) remain committed to the mobility mantra with operations in various locations around the world including car sharing, ride hailing, rental and subscription-based mobility operations.

Chinese car makers and their partners, perhaps reflecting China’s car sharing leadership, have been stepping into the mobility void with car sharing operations of their own and subscription-based vehicle access offerings. Nio Motors and Lynk & Co. are the most prominent here, but they have company.

Subscriptions are rapidly emerging as the go to solution, displacing “mobility” as the dominant modality. ?Here, too, car makers have launched and crashed multiple subscription-based solutions, but the concept has caught on with third parties like Autonomy and FINN and dozens of others.

The automobile subscription appears to be an idea whose time has come.?Cars are in short supply and interest rates are on the rise and the workplace is mobile – with multiple rounds of layoffs hitting the news.

Subscriptions eliminate tortuous vehicle acquisition paperwork at the dealership and tend to sidestep credit checks and most obviously, the long-term commitment to a particular automobile.?Speed and simplicity are driving this trend.

The even more fundamental attraction derives from the need among car makers to capture vehicle revenue on an ongoing basis – along with the need to manage battery reverse logistics at the vehicle’s end of use.?Car subscription terms and conditions still may look onerous to some – too expensive or restrictive.?But car makers and third parties are steadily reducing their rates, easing their terms, and expanding the range of available vehicles.

Strategy Analytics has identified 46 individual car subscription operators including dozens of startups.?Many of these operators are focusing on electric vehicles – the price tags of which have placed them beyond the means of many.

Current economic conditions appear to favor car subscriptions as they simultaneously discourage vehicle acquisitions.?Subscriptions are clearly a bright light in a bleak mobility landscape.?

Dan DeClerck

Multi-patented inventor, Wireless Technology, Software and Systems Architect, ADAS, Automotive.

2 年

There is one glaring thing that car share and mobility services still haven't solved. The cleanliness and suitability question. Who or what is going to ensure the vehicle is clean enough and mechanically sound enough for the next person to use it? What does this inspection, and tidying things up going to cost?

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Jess Zimmermann

Principal at unfoldnow | Creative Leadership and Culture Design | #Speaker #Leadership #Culture #DEI #Branding

2 年

Great synopsis of what's been happening on the car side of #mobility! Find it super unfortunate because #carsharing CAN be #profitable. At Ubiq.ai we help create a profitable environment for mobility operators every single day through our demand prediction and supply optimization technology and crowd-based execution platform. The solution isn't to just add more cars to a fleet in hopes that utilization rates/revenue increases, it's about creating efficient mobility operations - getting the most out of the least amount of resources. AKA running a truly sustainable business. Companies like MILES Mobility have proven that it can work.

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Christof Hellmis

CPO/CTO/COO, Board member, Investor

2 年

The models of mobility simply start to spread out. From ownership (less attractive to own an expensive asset in times of a technology disruption), leasing (years), subscription (months), renting (days/weeks) to sharing (hours). Margins on the actual mobility business model are tight and so far profits were made with buying and selling the vehicles. As usual ins such a changing and competitive marketplace scale(coverage, supported business models) will be of essence, so consolidation will happen further down the road..

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Barry Einsig

Independent Board Director | Transportation Technologist |Bain External Advisor

2 年

Every new industry has to go through this phase of creative destruction. I don’t think we are finished yet. But the survivors will be stronger companies.

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Christophe Cazes

Senior Vice President of Product, Engineering, Innovation & Technology | Generative AI | Digital Twins | Hybrid AI | Formerly @Stellantis @ArcelorMittal @Gestamp @Forvia

2 年

Thanks Roger, you nailed it! Now the focus is #battery #ev and #softwaredefinedvehicle!!

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