Yihao Kuaiche
Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, China’s recently merged taxi-hailing startups, have entered the next phase of their business.
Yesterday the companies announced they will roll out a low-cost service called Yihao Kuaiche in 61 cities.
Curiously, Yihao Kuaiche isn’t accessible as a standalone app, nor is it tucked inside Kuaidi or Didi’s existing apps.
Instead, users who download Yihao Zhuanche, an app that was once Kuaidi’s answer to UberBlack, will spot the new service at the very top of its vehicle listings.
As domestic media has reported, Yihao Kuaiche claims to operate on “Not-for-profit” model, wherein the passenger only pays for the cost of the ride, and the startup takes no cut from the transaction.
Users can pay for trips using Alipay, the Alibaba-affiliated payment service, or through bank transfer.
The service was originally launched in seven pilot cities two weeks ago, but yesterday marked its official rollout – welcomed by none other than Martin Luther King Jr. Yihao Kuaiche bears a strong resemblance to The People’s Uber – Uber’s “Not-for-profit” ridesharing service, which is currently in seven cities across China.
At the moment, the People’s Uber is actually priced slightly lower than Yihao Kuaiche.
Don’t think for a second that Kuaidi and Didi won’t find all sorts of ways to make their service even cheaper.
We’ve reached out to Kuaidi to ask for more information about what types of drivers are eligible to join Yihao Kuaiche.
Ridesharing remains in a legal grey-area in China, but compared to other countries, government agencies haven’t acted as swiftly.
Regardless, Uber, Kuaidi, and Didi’s embrace of a “Not-for-profit” model shows they’re nevertheless treading carefully.
While peer-to-peer ridesharing services like UberX and Lyft have dominated US cities like San Fracisco and Washington DC, in China, the densest ride-hailing networks center around taxis.
Ridesharing startups have made headlines in Chinese media.
Baidu invested in two ridesharing firms, Tiantian Yongche and 51yongche.
The search giant also disclosed an investment in Uber last December.
(Credits to Josh Horwitz)
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