Vinasun adds VIP
car hailing service to challenge Uber
A poster of the Vinasun taxi-booking app
The emergence of ride-sharing
apps such as Uber may have threatened Vietnam’s taxi market, but one of the
country’s major taxi operators is fighting back.
Vinasun,
which launched its own taxi-hailing app in July last year, has added a new
feature to its platform, allowing people to grab ‘VIP cars’ for their
specific travel needs.
The
new service, called VCar, will send a modern sedan to pick up passengers at
their request, replacing the traditional vehicles with the taxi top lights
and the company’s brand on their doors.
Passengers
used to have to directly contact the Vinasun cab dispatcher to specifically
request a VIP car, but they can now do it via the app.
A screen grab of the Vinasun app that shows the Vcar option
VCar
users can go to parties or business meetings with a private car, while still
actually using a taxi service. This is the same business model as Uber, which
launched in Vietnam in June 2014.
The
VCar vehicles are new and deluxe cars used to serve customers of Vinasun’s
tourism arm, Vinasun Travel, according to the cab operator.
However,
the VCar fleet is still modest, currently less than 100 cars, most of which
are seven-seater Toyota Fortuner’s or four-seater Camry’s, The Saigon Times Online said, citing a Vinasun
representative.
Both
Vinasun’s regular cabs and VCar’s are equipped with GPS-connected tablets,
which display the maps and information including driver names and fares.
Vinasun
did note however that due to the modest number of VIP cars, passengers may
find it difficult to request one.
The Saigon Times Online said
one of its reporters tried to hail a VIP car on Tuesday in District 1, Ho Chi
Minh City, but there was only one four-seater VCar available, while there
were dozens of traditional Vinasun cabs in the area.
The
VCar service currently fetches VND17,000 (US$0.76) a km for both four- and
seven-seater cars, compared to VND16,500 per km for a traditional Vinasun
taxi.
By
comparison, Uber and GrabCar, ride-sharing services provided by Grab, and
formerly known as GrabTaxi, both offer fares lower than VND15,000 per km
using seven-seater cars.
Both
Uber and Grab, which allows people to hail taxis, xe om(motorbike taxis), private cars or even a goods
shipper, are considered game changers in Vietnam’s taxi market.
Local
taxi associations have repeatedly called on authorities to protect them
against these new players, while some Vietnamese cab operators have at the
same time found their own way to deal with the changes.
Besides
Vinasun, Mai Linh, another major taxi brand, also has its own taxi-booking
app.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
|
Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 2, 2016
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