Como Gana UBER
Como Gana UBER
Como Gana UBER
And despite the fact that most people know Uber first and foremost as
a ride-hailing company, the unit that is the most profitable and fastest-
growing at Uber is Uber Eats: its relatively new meal delivery app.
To better understand how Uber earns revenues ahead of its 2019 IPO,
and how that matches up against its significant costs, we looked at
public financial and user data, statements from senior team members
at Uber, and texts like Brad Stone’s The Upstarts formed from interviews
with leaders there.
UBER’S FUNDAMENTALS
Contribution margin 50
Net negative churn 51
Competition 54
Make using your platform easier, faster, or more powerful than the
traditional method of connecting those buyers and sellers, and you
have a business.
Each company in this space has improved upon the experience and
economics of the system that it supplanted: eBay, by making it possible
to buy and sell anything to anyone on the planet; Airbnb, by making it
possible to rent out or book a room to/from anyone on the planet; and
Uber, by allowing taxi passengers and its drivers to find each other
without relying on the luck of a curbside hail.
Uber, on the other hand, has become more valuable the larger its network
has grown. For Uber, growth means faster pickup times, more drivers
on the road, and potentially lower prices for riders. It also means more
revenue for Uber. It fits all the criteria of the ideal marketplace business.
In other words, “supply” can meet “demand” in one of two ways: through
a loosely-organized, semi-random process of discovery, or through a
direct routing by a dispatcher middleman.
With medallion cabs, drivers come into contact with riders randomly or through a
dispatcher-directed pickup.
With Uber, on the other hand, users request rides directly through the
app. The nearest driver is dispatched to their location, and they can be
hailed again immediately after drop-off, creating:
• Higher supply liquidity for riders. With surge pricing moving drivers
from area to area, finding a ride is more reliable.
In the Uber model, drivers and riders can find each other more quickly and more reliably.
Texts sent from Uber to encourage drivers to get on the road during surge periods.
Since then, Uber’s business model has retained the same basic
dynamics. Its two biggest initiatives since UberX — Uber Pool and Uber
Eats — aim to increase driver utilization even further. With Pool, it adds
more passengers to the car. With Eats, drivers move around more than
just people.
Drivers are the biggest (but not the only) cost of doing business for Uber.
Below, we look at the massive expenses associated with becoming the
most popular ride-hailing app.
In Q3’18, the company reported another quarter in the red. Revenues rose
nearly 40% year-over-year to $2.95B, but the company still lost more than
$1B on a GAAP basis.
While Uber’s basic business model is quite capital efficient, it has continued
to struggle with its costs, which has been driven by a number of factors:
• Poor overall driver retention: While part-time work and flexibility are
core to the Uber driver experience, its ~13% monthly churn rate
on drivers means hefty sales, marketing, and promotional spend
designed to keep people signing up and driving for the platform.
Today, referral bonuses have largely been eliminated, but Uber still
spends hundreds of millions of dollars per quarter marketing itself to
new drivers, paying out on other incentives, and financing driver vehicles.
In Q2 alone, costs include:
• Promotions: $142M
Part of the problem for Uber is driver churn. Only about 20% of drivers
remain on Uber’s platform after one year, The Information has reported —
equivalent to about 12.5% monthly churn.
Uber, thus far, has largely been able to counteract the effects of
high churn through its high take rate and short payback period.
Between the middle of 2017 and the middle of 2018, Uber grew from
approximately 2M to 3M drivers worldwide. At 12.5% monthly churn, that
kind of growth would have meant consistently adding about 450,000 new
drivers to the platform per month.
Assuming then we set aside 80% of all Uber’s monthly sales & marketing
spend for driver acquisition, plus partner incentives, we end up with an
average driver acquisition cost of about $650.
Uber has about 3M drivers today, and each month they generate about
$4B in gross bookings. Uber takes roughly 22% of this. Given 3M drivers,
this works out to a revenue per driver per month of about $300.
This means Uber looks to earn back what it spent to acquire a driver
within just over two months.
At a 12.5% monthly churn rate, you lose about a third of your drivers after
three months, but the impact of this is difficult to model precisely.
Uber argues that its drivers churn out by design, because Uber is less
a “job” and more an “in-between” and part-time solution. Uber certainly
hasn’t run out of drivers yet. But Uber’s already-low retention rate and
relatively high take rate make it harder to see how Uber will cut driver
acquisition costs in the future or decrease churn.
Over its first few months, Uber was only used by a few dozen different
riders every weekend. Six months later, it had about 3,000 active users.
By the end of 2013, it was live in almost a hundred cities with roughly
80K new sign-ups per week.
Other Uber promotions have been more spur of the moment — free rides
at SXSW, free barbecue delivery, cats & dogs delivered through Uber.
Today, these referrals are far fewer and further between, and Uber’s
customer acquisition costs appear to have settled down.
Lyft has proven it can grow in the commoditized ride-hailing space just
as steadily as Uber — in 2018, it actually grew faster. At the same time,
it sends a signal to investors that Uber’s moat may not be as wide as
once thought.
By 2016, Lyft was only spending $5 — $10 per new user it acquired, and
events like those leading up to the #DeleteUber campaign only fueled its
user acquisition engine.
As of 2018, Uber still handles the majority of all trips taken through ride-hail apps — but
Lyft continues to gain.
Uber’s expansion started slow, but accelerated dramatically starting in 2013 — by 2015,
the company had already brought Uber to 275 different cities.
Uber’s business has been commoditized. For that reason, its local
competitors — often tied to the local community and supported by the
state — have had to do little more than temporarily outspend Uber in
order to gain their own foothold. In many of these international markets,
those competitors have successfully beaten Uber back.
The promotion did help grow the product. But about a year later, amid
criticism of unfair competitive practices and failure to ensure its drivers’
safety, Uber lost the ability to renew its license to operate in London.
However, in June 2018, Uber was granted a 15-month license to
operate in the city.
Uber’s expansion into any new market comes with a variety of new,
variable costs:
• Driver incentives
In Shanghai, Uber appears to never have gotten close to profitability, with a worse than
-150% contribution margin.
Didi raised billions in the early summer of 2016, hired 5,000 employees,
and worked its way to 85% market share in the Chinese ride-hailing
market. “Uber’s large institutional investors,” Brad Stone writes in his
book The Upstarts, “were worried, and began pressing [then-CEO]
Kalanick to negotiate a truce.”
By July 2017, Uber exited Russia, merging its operations with Yandex.
At the time, Yandex.Taxi had more than 2x Uber’s rides and bookings
run rate.
By the time Uber merged its Russian operations with Yandex, it was clear that local
governments and entrepreneurs around the world could win the ride-hailing
market regionally.
“It’s time for Uber to swallow its pride and face a hard truth: Instead
of attempting to conquer the world, it should be cutting deals with
competitors and making a graceful retreat in markets too tough to
dominate,” wrote Alison Griswold in Quartz.
Investors have generally agreed. After exiting southeast Asia, Uber was
able to record a profit on its balance sheet for the first time — $2.5B in
Q1’18 — a positive signal for investors with an IPO on the horizon.
Uber’s costs are still comparatively higher than most unicorn tech
startups. The problem isn’t just one of physical expansion. The problem
is that each locale Uber expands into is different — they have different
regulations, different technological needs, and different cultures around
ride-hailing. These differences make for an intimidating set of everyday
challenges for Uber.
Uber’s driver onboarding costs can vary dramatically between cities, through the majority
are relatively cheap given Uber’s straightforward set up process. Additional costs mostly
come out of local regulations and rules.
In other places, it has spent large sums of money to curry favor with
local communities. After a London court refused to renew Uber’s license
to operate in the city, the company undertook a massive (successful)
diplomatic effort to reverse the decision, part of which included rolling
out new financial insurance packages to cover driver losses due to
health or injury. Recently, Uber announced it would be investing $200M
in Canada — where many provinces have banned Uber before — as it
expands and builds out a new branch of the company in Toronto.
Despite the high costs involved in running the business, Uber has been
able to grow its valuation and keep investors happy because of its industry
leadership in core markets, majority share of several large markets globally,
and its fast pace of consistent, month-over-month revenue growth.
From 2012 to 2018, Uber’s net revenue per quarter rose from $1.4M
to $2.8B.
Uber grew revenue exponentially for its first 4 years, ending 2016 at $1.584 billion
a quarter.
First, users pay a variable base rate. They pay a rate based on the
distance they’re going and the time it will take to get there. They cover
various local fees and taxes, and may pay a service or booking fee.
About 75 — 80% of the total fare a rider pays goes to the driver, and
between 20 — 25% goes to Uber — though this can differ based on a
driver’s tenure and location.
Uber uses its take to pay taxes, credit card fees, sales & marketing,
insurance, and other operating expenses, and pockets the rest.
But certain Uber services are also simply more dynamically-priced than
others. When you take an UberX, you pay per-minute and per-mile. When
you take an Uber Pool, you pay a dynamically generated rate based
primarily on how many other passengers will join you in the car.
This kind of pricing — decoupled from the cost of providing the service
— is primary in Uber’s newest (and some of its most profitable) services,
and it also offers Uber the biggest opportunity to drive further revenue.
UBER BLACK
Uber’s premium transport service, Uber Black, was the forerunner
of UberX and the original ride option within the Uber app.
By 2016, however, even though 20% of all drivers on Uber were Uber
Black drivers, only 6% of all rides were.
Part of the problem is cost. In many cities, Uber Black drivers are
licensed black car drivers with commercial drivers’ licenses, in
comparison to the independent contractors of UberX.
In New York City, the per-mile rate on an Uber Black ride was as high as
$9.00 before UberX arrived. Today, it’s $3.75.
On a short, 0.8 mile ride, you end up paying just under $18:
The release of UberX meant that calling an Uber finally became cheaper than calling a
cab in NYC.
In New York, a short 0.8 mile ride is assessed at a base rate of $2.55 and
a minimum fee of $8.00. In a ride comparable in time and distance to the
Uber Black ride diagrammed above, you end up paying just under $9.24.
In Milwaukee, the base fare is $1.25, and in Nashville, it’s only $1.00.
In Boston, on the other hand, UberX’s base fare is $2.10. In New York,
where driver onboarding costs are the highest (as discussed earlier),
the base fare is $2.55.
Not long after UberX launched, Uber secured itself virtually unlimited
access to capital — and both the ability and mandate to use the network
to drive newer, higher-margin value.
It’s not the first instance of this kind of app-enabled service. John
Zimmer, the founder of Lyft, launched an app to help university students
share rides with each other in 2006. And Lyft launched its own carpool
option, Lyft Line, a month before Uber opened Pool up to users
in San Francisco.
Uber collects a fare on three separate trips: the point A to point F trip, the
point B to point F trip, and the point C to point G trip. The driver only gets
one fare — for driving from point A to point G — but they get the added
benefit of always being on the road, making money. They’re idle for less
time, which works out both for them and for Uber.
Going from Lower Manhattan to JFK you might pay upwards of $70 on
UberX. Of that $70, Uber gets about $15 — $17 and the driver gets
$53 — $55.
On Uber Pool, given similar traffic conditions, you would pay around $50.
But then you pick up a few passengers headed to JFK along the way in
Brooklyn or Queens. They each have to pay $20 or $30 each to join your
already-existing route to JFK — a route your driver would be driving with
or without them. Now the total revenue on that ride is up to $100. The
driver still takes home $53 — $55, plus the fare associated with the time/
mileage to pick up additional passengers — but Uber can now take $45 —
$47 instead of $15 — $17.
In 2016, Uber’s David Plouffe announced that 20% of all Uber rides
around the world were taking place on Uber Pool, though in some
markets, it appears that these rides are not yet generating net revenue
for the company.
The potential for Uber Pool is significant, but in order for it to pay off,
Uber needs a lot more people opting for pooled rides.
This is why while Uber Pool may not be the most revenue-generating
business inside Uber, it is likely one of the most forward-thinking. It is
about increasing value to users and increasing revenue to Uber through
higher utilization.
Uber Eats has succeeded because it uses the existing global network of
drivers within Uber to provide a higher-margin, value-add service to its
customers — food delivery.
Uber Eats allows users to order food from local restaurants through the
app for delivery within 20 minutes to an hour. Food is delivered by local
Uber drivers, who receive Uber Eats requests within the standard Uber
drivers’ app.
In Q1’18, Uber Eats generated $1.5B in revenue and lost less than $80M.
Today, Uber Eats reportedly generates about 10 — 15% of Uber’s
total revenue.
Uber Eats generates revenue in three ways: a sliding scale delivery fee
from each customer, a percentage of each driver’s gross fare, and a
30% fee from the restaurant on each order.
Each order pays a booking fee that is determined, like Uber Pool, by
both distance and matching. In the first example below, an order from
a McDonald’s 1.5 miles away pays a $3.49 booking fee. In the second
example, a restaurant that is 2.6 miles away is only given a $1.49
booking fee.
It also benefits from the fact that the majority of restaurants cannot afford
to hire their own delivery drivers. They work with Uber Eats to supplement
their revenue with delivery orders, even if they have to pay out a cut to Uber.
Not all restaurateurs are convinced that working with Uber Eats is worth it given the
gross 30% cut it takes out of each order.
In markets like NYC where other food delivery options like Seamless
are well entrenched, Uber Eats growth has been slower.
Uber Eats’ ultimate value to Uber is not just as a potentially huge profit
center for the company, however. It is as a stepping stone to even more
revenue-generating “side apps” that demonstrate the potential for Uber
to become more than a ride-hailing company.
Scooters fit into a vision of Uber that holds it less as an app for getting
a ride and more as an app for getting anywhere.
Autonomous cars are the other key part of Uber’s future story for
investors because these not only strengthen Uber’s value as a provider
of rides from point A to point B — they offer a constantly moving fleet of
vehicles without the cost of drivers that can solve a lot of very valuable
last-mile problems.
The advantages go beyond lower fares for riders and a higher take of
the profits. With autonomous cars, Uber would be able to ensure its
cars are producing value even when they’re empty of passengers — or it
could simply idle them, turn them off, or cycle them in to maintenance/
storage if not needed at the time. Uber wouldn’t have to rely on financial
incentives to make sure drivers get out on the roads during busy times —
it could simply spin up the right number of cars, optimized perfectly
for demand.
Autonomous cars also mean Uber’s business model will have to change
in other ways. Owning a fleet of autonomous vehicles rather than renting
the time of vehicle-owners as it does now means Uber has to pay the
attendant costs on those vehicles — maintenance, insurance, and
depreciation. That’s in addition to manufacturing the vehicles or
buying them through a partner.
The project is, however, a drain on profits. Uber’s self-driving unit loses
between $125M and $200M a quarter and the company has spent a total
of $2B on the project overall, according to The Information. Waymo, the
Alphabet unit that is the furthest along at developing an autonomous
car and the best positioned competitively, has already become the first
company in America to charge for self-driving car rides.
But, as discussed, not every country and city has been equivalent when it
comes to generating revenue for Uber. In addition, while many observers
have seen Uber as an urban phenomenon, much of its market is rural and
suburban — outside the traditional bounds of a cab service.
A company is contribution margin profitable when it has more revenues than variable
costs with a market or a product — a good measure of future profitability for a company
like Uber with fixed costs that should grow more slowly over time and at scale.
An early criticism of Uber was that its model would only work in and benefit urban areas.
This graphic shows that over time, Uber has expanded out into the suburban and rural
areas outside cities.
In New York, for example, looking at overall growth in rides (both cab
and Uber), most is taking place not in the downtown core, but in the
outer boroughs.
Before Uber, for-hire rides in the outer boroughs of New York City were a marginal
proportion of all rides taken in the New York City area. After Uber was introduced,
they became approximately 30%.
The story of Uber is of two competing narratives that both hinge on costs
and revenues.
One story is that Uber is a company that can’t stop burning through money in
pursuit of dominance in a crowded, commoditized marketplace.
The other is that Uber is building a network that, in the future, will be worth a
magnitude more than it is worth today.
CONTRIBUTION MARGIN
Uber has a reputation for burning through money, and it’s often been
criticized by investors and analysts for failing to turn that spend into
profitability.
In its more mature and profitable cities — New York, DC, Boston, Paris —
Uber is contribution margin profitable to the tune of 8 — 9%. That means
when ignoring fixed costs, 8 — 9% of its top-line revenue in those cities
turns into profit.
One of the key reasons that Uber’s growth in mature markets has led to
contribution margin profitability is that the service’s basic unit economics are
themselves profitable — on each ride, Uber makes money. More importantly,
people who take Uber rides tend to take more Uber rides over time.
Early on at Uber, the team saw that a new Uber user in the San Francisco
area was worth about $40 — $50 a month in net revenue and $8 — $10
in net profit.
Over their months on the service, however, according to Brad Stone and
early investors in Uber like AngelList’s Naval Ravikant, that number rose.
Negative churn exists when you’re driving more revenue from new & existing
users than you’re losing through those deleting the app or using the app
less.
If you have negative churn, you aren’t just adding new customers to your
product every month — you’re making more and new kinds of money from
all of the existing customers you have.
With negative churn, your revenue growth rate increases over time rather than tending to
increase in a linear fashion. Source: Tomasz Tunguz
That means that over time, revenue compounds rather than increasing at a
linear rate tied to rate of new customer acquisition.
In the long run, this makes it easier to achieve profitability, which Uber has
found to be the case in its more stable, mature markets.
Negative churn was one of the first real indicators that Uber wasn’t just
replacing taxis within a limited set of transportation contexts — i.e., “I live in
the suburbs, need to get to the airport fast, and don’t know if I can reliably
get a cab right now.” If that were true, one would expect usage of the app to
remain relatively steady among users.
In reality, people were using Uber more and more the longer they had the
app. Those specific urgent contexts may have been the occasion for them
to try Uber, but once they had the app installed, they began using it in other
cases — cases where, for example, they might have previously driven, taken
the bus, biked, or waited for a traditional yellow cab.
In 2014, Benchmark VC Bill Gurley proposed that Uber might one day
completely eclipse the car-for-hire market and go on to challenge the
multi-trillion dollar market for traditional car ownership.
Uber does have one key advantage over most competitors, and that’s scale.
Scale is important because the main lever in this business is price. Price
is what users care about — when they find lower prices on one ride-hailing
service, they switch. That means if Lyft lowers its prices, Uber must lower its
prices, and so on. But Uber has always been able to sustain lower prices for
longer. If it needs to, thanks to the money raised, it can afford to lower prices
for riders and pay drivers higher surge prices, pulling both riders and drivers
to its platform.
By 2017, Uber and Lyft’s aggressive surges were leading drivers away from Juno and
back towards the new duopoly in ride-hailing.
This eventually led to many of Juno’s drivers going back to Uber and Lyft.
When they did, Juno’s passengers would have had trouble finding reliable
and timely rides, and they would have gone back to the source of consistent
supply as well.
What Juno’s initial success and final collapse demonstrated was that ride-
hailing is a commodity.
For that reason, many critics believed Uber would eventually beat Lyft easily.
With more money in the bank, they had pricing power, and could starve Lyft
out of the market.
“We are thinking about alternative forms of transport. If you look at Jump, the
dockless bicycle startup Uber acquired earlier this year, the average length
of a trip at Jump is 2.6 miles. That is, 30 to 40 percent of our trips in San
Francisco are 2.6 miles or less. Jump is much, much cheaper than taking an
UberX. To some extent it’s like, ‘Hey, let’s cannibalize ourselves.’ Let’s create
a cheaper form of transportation from A to B, and for you to come to Uber,
and Uber not just being about cars, and Uber not being about what the best
solution for us is, but really being about the best solution for here.”
Then there’s Uber Eats — now the fastest-growing meal delivery service in
the US — which benefits significantly from the constant movement of Uber
cars around America’s metropolitan areas by turning them all into delivery
vehicle on-demand. Uber Eats is today the most profitable part of Uber.
Of course, as Ben Thompson points out in Stratechery, Uber Eats is not just
layering a complementary service on top of Uber — it is bundling another
opportunity and another retention mechanism for drivers.