Gas at $5 tips some U.S. rideshare drivers to wrap cars in ads
Send a link to a friend
[June 23, 2022] By
Nivedita Balu
(Reuters) - When Duana Malcolm had her blue
Hyundai Sonata sedan 'wrapped' as a mobile advertising board, the
part-time delivery driver did not expect to make an extra $200 per
month.
Malcolm is one of the many rideshare drivers looking for alternate
sources of income to cushion the impact of soaring gas prices and higher
costs for everything from tires to servicing, as U.S. inflation touches
a more than 40-year high.
"It's not life changing money, but I know I'm getting money every month
for the next five months that's going to ease my concerns," Malcolm, who
drives in the Miami and Fort Lauderdale areas, said of the arrangement
with outdoor ad firm Carvertise.
Drivers can make anywhere between $100 and $600 a month, depending on
the ad and the duration of the campaign and can make a bonus of $100 to
$200 for timely ads.
And it is not just car wrapping, advertisers are also turning to
traditional forms like billboards and bus benches, as potential
customers who were glued to their screens during the pandemic return to
offices and venture out more often.
Carvertise, which pays drivers to wrap their cars in ads printed on
adhesive-backed films known as 'decals', said it has seen a monthly
growth of between 8% and 13% in new signups in the past three months,
with more expected.
"By wrapping their cars with our clients' advertising, rideshare drivers
turn their cars into rolling billboards and get paid for something
they're doing anyway: driving," Greg Star, co-founder of the Wilmington,
a Delaware-based firm, said.
[to top of second column] |
A rideshare car with ads wrapped by mobile advertisement company
Carvertise is seen at the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Event in New
York City, U.S., in this file image acquired by Reuters on June 22,
2022. Carvertise/Handout via REUTERS
Users will have to install an app and register on the platform to take part in a
campaign and the company will select the drivers it uses based on the
advertiser's target location and the user's driving habits, whether commuting to
work or working as a rideshare or delivery driver.
Market leaders Carvertise and California-based Wrapify said they have thousands
of gig drivers on their subscriber list and clients ranging from GoPuff, EA
Sports, 7-Eleven to local law firms. They have plastered thousands of cars with
ads.
Although ride-hailing firms Uber and Lyft, under pressure due to acute driver
shortages, have announced a fuel surcharge, this has not been enough to make up
for the rise in fuel costs, with U.S. gasoline average price rising above $5 a
gallon for the first time ever earlier this month.
Uber and others are also in talks on formal partnerships with firms such as
Carvetise to boost driver income, a source familiar with the matter said, but
nothing has been finalized.
Uber said it has been focused on its cartop advertising network, which has 112
million daily impressions with ad displays atop over 3,000 vehicles across major
U.S. cities.
Lyft declined to comment.
(Reporting by Nivedita Balu in Bengaluru; Editing by Ankur Banerjee and Arun
Koyyur)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |