Categories
Uncategorized

Uber, The Toronto Storm, Price Gouging, and a Lesson from Coca-Cola

uber user interfaces

There’s an article that’s making the rounds in techie and entrepreneurial circles in Accordion City: it’s The Don’t Be an Asshole Rule, written by Aron Solomon. The asshole to which he’s referring in the article is Uber, the online service in the business of connecting people who want rides with taxis, limos, or enterprising people who’d like to make some extra money driving people around. During Monday’s storm, which left large areas of the city flooded or without power, the roads gridlocked, and thousands of people stranded in the rain, Uber increased the price of their private car service to nearly twice the normal rate. Uber calls it “surge pricing”, but many people called it “price gouging”. Kerry Morrison was one of the first people I saw tweeting his displeasure over surge pricing:

kmore uber tweet

If you look at Uber Toronto’s Twitter feed at the time of this writing (almost noon on Wednesday, June 10th), they’re still in full PR defensive mode, explaining their decision to use surge pricing on their private car service, stating that it never applied to taxis, and stating that the increased prices, some of which would be passed along to drivers, was needed to provide an incentive to private car owners to go out onto gridlocked, unlit, and possibly flooded streets without traffic lights.

This isn’t Uber’s first controversy over surge pricing. They doubled the price of private car service in the New York City / New Jersey area during Hurricane Sandy, which was also met with calls of price gouging. The PR backlash was bad enough that they had to reduce their rates back to standard, but in order to keep drivers happy, continued to pay them at double their going rate. This damage control is reported to have cost them $100,000 a day, and it looks as though they haven’t learned their lesson, in spite of the tuition fee.

Uber isn’t the first company with a self-inflicted wound over variable pricing. In fact, there’s a lesson that Coca-Cola learned at the turn of the millennium that’s often taught in business school.

coke vending machines

In 1999, Douglas Ivester was the CEO of Coca-Cola. Hailed as a brilliant guy, hand-picked and groomed by his predecessor Robert Goizueta and so data-driven that Fortune wrote “Ivester may give us a glimpse of the 21st-century CEO, who marshals data and manages people in a way no pre-Information Age executive ever did or could,” he should’ve had a successful run as leader of the world’s number one beverage company. Instead, his tenure as CEO was short, with Coke’s board of directors — one of whom was Warren Buffett — asking him to resign a mere two years after he got the job.

While Ivester had a talent for business and number-crunching, he lacked the ability to handle the sensibilities of people, whether they were in the company or Coke’s customers. He snubbed key people within the organization, micromanaged, and alienated the bottlers, who in the soft drink industry, are key allies. He also did a terrible job with customers, most notably responding way too slowly when bad batches of Coke made people in Belgium ill, and attempting to introduce variable pricing at Coke vending machines.

variable pricing

Illustration by Liz Meyer for a Time magazine article.

The idea behind variable pricing is a simple one: you adjust the price of a good or service that you’re selling based on some kind of factor, such as demand, where the product is being sold, the time of year, and so on. Ivester wanted to do was rig Coke vending machines so that the price would vary depending on the outside temperature that day: on hot days, a can or bottle of Coke would cost more, on cold days, they’d cost less.

The New York Times explained the logic behind Ivester’s thinking back in 1999, and it’s the sort of thing that you’d find in an Economics 101 textbook, in the section that introduces demand curves. Your desire for a nice cold Coke during a big championship game on a hot summer day would be much higher than usual, and presumably, you’d get more of what economists call utility from a cold drink on such a day. So it’s worth more, isn’t it? Ivester, ever the number-cruncher thought so, saying — and I’m using an actual quote here:

“So, it is fair that it should be more expensive. The machine will simply make this process automatic.”

polar bear facepalm

What makes perfect sense in the overly-simplified, assumption-heavy world of Economics 101 doesn’t always make an equivalent amount of sense in the real world, and the variable-pricing vending machines came off as a form of high-tech price gouging. It didn’t make Coke look like a rational actor simply collecting a fair profit from increased utility for a product sold; it them look like sugar-water-shilling douchenozzles.

People accept variable pricing in a number of situations. We accept that airline ticket prices change daily, with the price climbing as the date of the flight nears. We also accept that airline tickets are more expensive during peak travel times. We accept that gas prices fluctuate, sometimes a number of times during the day, and the most certainly climb during weekends and holidays. We accept that housing prices climb as the supply of houses diminishes.

In all of these cases, we’ve accepted these differences in price as reasonable, partly because we can see the reasons behind the pricing are complex, and partly because the price changes are predictable. We know that flights will be more expensive around Christmas, and we know that the demand for them will be high.

It’s a different situation with Coke, however. This New York Times article analyzing Coca-Cola’s variable pricing idea suggests that we have an intuitive sense of what a Coke should cost, and that messing with that price violates our expectations. Varying its price with the heat makes the pricing seems cruelly arbitrary; it seems to send the message “your pain is my profit”. It sounds like the sort of thing a cartoon villain (or the Ferengi on Star Trek) would pull.

ferengi business ethics

It’s one thing for Uber to use surge pricing for events like holidays or tourist season; these events are predictable, an increase in price seems fair, and it doesn’t look like crass opportunism. However, in an unpredictable event that brings the city to its knees and strands thousands of people in the rain, surge pricing looks like making money off people’s misery.

Some businesses took the opposite tack — my friend Sandy Kemsley wrote on Facebook that she was “so proud to live in a city where last night, with 1000’s of stranded commuters, at least two hotel chains offered discounts”. It’s a financial risk, but I think it would’ve paid off. It would’ve been better for Uber to lower their prices during the storm and provide greater incentive for drivers to get out there and pick people up and treat it as a marketing expense rather than use surge pricing. However, I don’t think that will happen; if a serious disaster like Hurricane Sandy didn’t convince them, a far less serious problem like Monday’s storm has no chance of doing so.

Categories
Uncategorized

How Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Dealt With the Flood and Power Outage

When Calgary had their flood — whose effects were considerably greater than ours — their Mayor, Naheed Nenshi, did an admirable job handling it, and even managed to throw in a little humour:

nenshi on flood

And how did our Mayor do so far? Well, here’s what reporter Don Peat from the Toronto Sun, a paper that’s pro-Ford in a bloodyminded head-up-its-own-ass kind of way, tweeted:

This is what you get with a Mayor who thinks the solution to everything is “the car”.

rob ford in escalade

Categories
Uncategorized

Tom Ryaboi’s Stunning Toronto Flood Photos

Tom Ryaboi photography got some great pics of the Toronto flood! Check out the photos in this Facebook set:

tom ryaboi flood photo

tom ryaboi flood photo 2

tom ryaboi flood photo 3

Categories
Uncategorized

Scenes from Toronto’s Storm and Flood

Most of the photos in this post are from other people — click on them to see the originals.

smiling in the flood

Photo by “~Evidence~”.

Last night’s storm brought down more rain than Hurricane Hazel did, giving us 126 millimetres (just shy of five inches) of rain in two hours. Complicating matters was the fact that it started in the middle of rush hour.

storm coming in

Photo by “zivanod”.

The incoming front was an incredible sight, and a number of people caught it on camera.

storm coming in 2

Photo by Emily Tu.

storm coming in 3

Photo by Ann Darby.

Despite the fact that what should’ve been a half-hour drive turned into a three-hour idlefest thanks to power outages and people forgetting that intersections become four-way stops when the traffic lights go out, I got off rather lightly.

joey traffic 2

Photo by Yours Truly.

I had a nearly-full tank of gas (I generally re-fill the tank whenever I hit the half-full mark) so I didn’t have to ditch the car as many others had to.

joey traffic 1

Photo by Yours Truly.

I also had terrestrial AM radio to keep me informed, satellite radio to keep me entertained, and even this little light show on Carlingview Drive:

I even managed to give a little old lady a lift from Martin Grove and Eglinton down to Bloor and Islington. I was high and dry in my car with plenty of room; I couldn’t leave her stranded alone in the rain in good conscience:

lift

In the meantime, on the other side of town, the Don River did its best Amazon impression, as Leah George put it:

don as amazon

Photo by Leah George.

The Don Valley Parkway, a major artery and often-snarled highway during rush hours, flooded over completely at certain spots:

don valley parkway

Photo by George Kourounis.

Lake Shore was still navigable by car in most spots:

lake shore flooded

Photo by “hooksncrooks”.

Here’s Toronto’s soon-to-be most famous butt. This photo has appeared in papers all over the world:

back to the car

Photo by The Canadian Press.

Here’s what will become Toronto’s most famous one-percenter problem: a ditched Ferarri. I’m pretty sure it no longer has that “new car smell” today:

swamped ferrari

Photo by Patrick Dell, Globe and Mail.

This whirlpool shot by “hooksncrooks” is great. I wonder if anyone shot any video:

whirlpool

Photo by “hooksncrooks”.

A good number of underpasses became impassable during the storm, but many drivers still tried to “run the rapids”:

running the rapids

Photo by “J P”.

Some train commuters didn’t fare much better. This GO commuter train was completely flooded out, and not just on the outside…

go train

Photo by Christine Cho.

…but inside as well.

inside flooded go train

Photo by Alecia Fowler.

Many passengers ended up wading to dry land, while those less able to make the slog were assisted by crews in boats:

go train rescue

Photo by Scott Meiklejohn.

A few subway stations were also waterlogged. Here’s Queen’s Park station:

flooded ttc station

Photo by Spencer Tong.

King Street was just bad around the Liberty Village area. This is King and Atlantic:

king and atlantic

Photo by “Zoo OWL”.

Here’s King and Dufferin:

king and dufferin

Photo by Angelina Chapin.

Here’s Front and Simcoe:

front and simcoe

Photo by Ashley Bernatt.

Categories
Uncategorized

Tonight: The Calgary Stamp-Aid, A Night of Dry Humour for Alberta’s Flood Victims

calgary stamp-aid

If you’re looking for a good time for a good cause tonight, please consider the Calgary Stamp-Aid, a night of comedy to raise money to help the people of Alberta rebuild after the recent floods. If you can attend in person, it’s happening at the Gladstone Hotel (1214 Queen Street West at Gladstone, just east of Dufferin). If you can’t attend in person, you can watch it online! The fun starts at 9:00 p.m. Eastern (7:00 p.m. Calgary time).

Categories
Uncategorized

Ladies and Gentlemen, I Give You: The Biscuits and Gravy Fountain

Who needs Paula Deen when you have one of these?

biscuits and gravy fountain

Categories
Uncategorized

The Asiana Crash and the Idiots it Brought Out of the Woodwork

david eun asiana photo

The recent crash of the Asiana jet at San Francisco airport has shown the upside of citizen journalism, what with the photo above taken by passenger David Eun, a Samsung executive, who also tweeted this:

…and with this eyewitness video shot by Fred Hayes on his smartphone:

And then, there’s the downside. You’ll find more on the Public Shaming blog, in the article titled Idiots Use Plane Crash in San Francisco to Mock Asians, Blame North Korea.

The “Asians Can’t Drive” Tweets

The ignorant tweets came in two categories, the first being “let’s use a tragedy to make racist jokes”. Click on any of these screen captures to visit the corresponding Twitter accounts and see what other great intellectual gems they’re sharing.

racist tweet 1 - asap yarby

racist tweet 2 - miriam

racist tweet 3 - devin rivers

racist tweet 4 - eric nelson

Imagine the hue and cry from these people if someone made an “Americans can’t drive” joke in reference to reports that one of the people killed in the crash may have been killed by being run over by a rescue vehicle.

The “All Korea is North Korea” Tweets

The other category of tweets made about the crash is “It’s enemy action!”, in which people are clearly unable to discern the difference between Nice Korea (home of Samsung, PSY) and Naughty Korea (home of Kim Jong-Un, son of the bad guy from Team America: World Police). Once again, click on the screen captures of the tweets to see the Twitter accounts of these masters of geopolitics.

racist tweet 5 - fabricio bertin

racist tweet 6 - courtney

racist tweet 7 - bulls on parade htx

racist tweet 8 - bishop