Q&A with Amir Zafar, CEO of GRiDD Technologies
Chauffeur Driven Magazine July 2024 issue
With close to 30 years of experience in system integration and technology-related ventures, GRiDD Technologies CEO Amir Zafar launched his current company in August 2011 to provide much-needed connectivity solutions for the luxury ground transportation industry. Chauffeur Driven spoke to Zafar about GRiDD’s groundbreaking connectivity platform GNet, and what’s coming from the developer.
The Interview
First of all, there are no more data entry errors. The info came from the source system, which most likely came directly from a passenger’s app. In other words, nobody’s touched it or retyped it. It ensures that there are no more errors in data entry, which happened regularly in the past.
Another thing, GNet’s platform has cleaned up the standard of how people type in addresses. Before, people would freeform the address and put in notes like ‘knock on door number two’ in the address line. Now, the platform forces users to enter it accurately and put their notes in a different field. This guarantees that the chauffeur finds the pickup and drop-off efficiently. That’s a big enhancement. For the driver, it’s huge… they don’t make mistakes or need to call the office for help. If, for instance, the address is wrong, then it was typed into the app incorrectly by the client two systems back, not by the local company that’s performing the job.
Errors have gone way down, and chauffeurs are a lot happier because they are using their own company’s app. GNet has very good location tracking, so it tells them where to go, making life easier for the driver. Response time has also become much faster. It used to be that you’d have to make a reservation 24 hours in advance. I remember being a dispatch office some years ago and it was early in the morning. A partner called and asked for a 4 p.m. LAX pickup. Immediately, he got a “No.” It was seen as just too difficult and tedious to take a reservation and deliver the same day. Here we are many years later and response time has become much faster. Today, at least 20 percent of reservations that go into GNet are executed the same day. It’s made life that much easier.
Also, we’ve made things cheaper to operate because you’re no longer paying a human to do what is now automated. So, data entry, updates, calling back affiliates with chauffeur/vehicle information, all those manual communications are eliminated. Today, it’s done between the systems. Notifications go directly to the passenger showing them that the chauffeur is on the road. Our whole thing was, we need to make it cheaper to operate and work between companies.
Now, GNet has a directory that lets operators find each other using the platform. There are about 3,300 companies, and rising, around the world able to be searched. Say you’re looking for an operator in Paris: You can zoom in on a map and see a number of dots that represent the companies in that area. It lists the contact person, phone number, website … everything for each operator. GNet is evolving.
Today we are seeing 99 percent of companies that stay and keep using it. At the beginning, they may have been hesitant, but after a month or two they’ve found themselves expanding and working with new partners. It’s cost effective: Operators are paying roughly $1 per reservation, saving them $8-10.
We’re also working with software companies that are building apps for independent operators (IOs). They are a big segment of the industry and should be included within this network. Limousine companies have their favorite IOs that they work with, and today, they’re working with them blindly. There are many reasons why IOs should be visible and interconnected to the industry. Basically, we’re trying to limit the barriers of software politics and include everyone on this platform.
The newest product we have is a portal that is an upgrade from what our users are using today, which has improved search capability for partners by service offering or by vehicle types owned. If you’re only looking for companies that do corporate shuttles or offer wedding services, you’ll be able to get immediate results.
Another new feature for the portal is its documentation management that allows users to upload their paperwork, whether it’s insurance information or licenses, and share with their partners. This way affiliates can see each other’s insurances, permits, and licenses instantly. Further, it allows operators to automate sharing tasks, so they don’t have to repeatedly scan and send documents; documents remain there in the system and shared with only who they choose.
The portal is also going to become smarter and provide good analytics. For example, it’s valuable for the companies using GNet to know that 20 percent of the trips that go into GNet are performed the same day, this was unheard of 10 years ago. It’s good for the industry to have metrics. We are going to provide users with statistics and metrics, to show trends as they happen. We’re building tools, reports, and software that make sense of all statistical data. Ultimately, these metrics will give us a leg up on TNCs and any other competition that comes in. That’s the whole idea.
We’re always looking to improve. Things change fast, and you must keep up like using AI. We’re now using AI as a smart assistant in the new portals so that operators can auto-build their profile. If a limousine company needs help building their GNet profile, the AI assistant will grab information from all over the net. It will dive into your website or Facebook and pull up your service information and build that profile. It’s almost like a personal assistant who’s really fast. Our goal for the new portal is that it will be like a LinkedIn for transportation companies, where you can search for a company on Google and one of the results will be their GNet profile. This can especially help smaller companies that don’t have a website and will now have a public profile.
We’re coming up with a couple of other products and partnerships for the next year to address rates and pricing. Ultimately creating a marketplace where software companies and other service providers can offer their services or apps through GNet.
Our goal is to keep operators away from the computer and phones, so that they can use their time effectively to work on their operations. The mechanics and technical stuff can be done behind the scenes.
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