A Tweeting Cabbie’s Growing Business
| special to arstechnica
“Can you pick me up at my place in 15 minutes? Text me when you get here.” No, this isn’t a text message to a friend or a call to a car service—it’s a direct message sent through Twitter to a driver of a Chicago cab. Rashid Temuri, who goes by “Chicago Cabbie” online (@ChicagoCabbie on Twitter) has taken what would otherwise be considered a traditional taxi business and integrated it with social media in a way that is still exceedingly rare in the service industry. How much better can it be interacting your clients through Twitter, FourSquare, Facebook, or Google Latitude? Apparently a lot—Temuri is not only seeing success from his social media strategy, he’s building a loyal repeat customer base because of it.
Here’s how Temuri works: he, like most other licensed cabs in the US, works through a dispatching company (in this case, Flash Cabs). Normally he would put himself “on call” when he’s on duty, meaning the company can send him to pick someone up when the client calls in. But instead of doing that, he has been posting when he’s available on Twitter—for example, here’s one of his recent tweets:
“Good morning #Chicago!! It’s a wet wet day here. 41°. Take $5 OFF the meter from now till 2PM to any airport from anywhere. :-) #ORD #MDW”
In addition to tweeting, he also allows clients (or potential clients, as the case may be) to follow him on Google Latitude or Find My Friends so that people know wherever he is at any given time and can contact him when they need a ride. He offers free WiFi within his cab for iPhone and iPad users (“Don’t use your limited data!” he says), and plans to soon offer free WiFi for regular laptop users. Sometimes, as seen in the tweet above, Temuri gives discounts for his social media followers, and he always remembers who everyone is.

“Honestly, I never looked at it as marketing nor I had that in mind when I started @ChicagoCabbie account,” Temuri told Ars. “I started Twitter thinking I’ll talk to people about taxi industry of Chicago. I feel there is a gap between taxi drivers and customers and there are lots of misunderstandings. They both are in such a defensive mode. They both feel like they have to protect themselves from the other and it’s just so wrong. I joined Twitter to eliminate the gap between a taxi customer and taxi driver.”
What started out as an earnest attempt to bridge the understanding gap between cabbies and clients has since flourished into a successful Internet-based business—one that Temuri says can sometimes be overwhelming, even to an old-school geek like himself. (Temuri told me about his days as a professional video editor, adding that he has a Mac Pro at home and uses his iPhone and iPad regularly.)
“It’s been working out way better then I ever expected,” he said. In fact, it has been working out so well that Temuri estimates his clientele is 90 to 95 percent repeat business—something that he thinks gives him a major leg up on the competition, not to mention that he’s making genuine friends out of the fact that he’s so easy to reach via “new” media methods. “I’m loving the fact that, not only will I be picking up somebody I’ve met several times, we sometimes start our conversation where we left off.”..Continue reading at Arstechnica.com
10 Notes/ Hide
-
my9online liked this
-
didigitalny posted this
