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Exclusive: Sequoia, Naspers, Venture Highway Invest INR 100 Cr In Quick Ride

Exclusive: Sequoia, Naspers, Venture Highway Invest INR 104 Cr In Quick Ride

SUMMARY

Quick Ride enables car and bike pooling services in metro cities

The company claims to be operationally profitable

The company expects to achieve 14-15 times growth in next 1 year

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Bengaluru-headquartered car and bike-pooling startup Quick Ride has raised INR 100.78 Cr ($14.4 Mn) in Series B funding from its existing investors Sequoia, Naspers and Venture Highway.

Talking to Inc42, Quick Ride cofounder and CEO KNM Rao, said that it is “sufficiently funded” by global investors, but refused to divulge further details.

According to a Ministry of Corporate Affairs filing accessed by Inc42, the company issued equity shares at a premium of INR 1.404 Lakh while preference shares were issued at a premium of INR 1.403 Lakh.

Further, Naspers’s Ashutosh Sharma has been appointed as a director and Venture Highway’s Priya Mohan has been appointed as an observer of the board of Quick Ride.

Prior to this round, the company had raised an undisclosed amount of Series A funding from Sequoia, Naspers and Venture Highway.

The four-year-old venture connects people travelling on the same route and at the same time. It helps to identify matches, connect instantly, communicate and share costs in a cashless way.

Here’s How Quick Ride Enables Car & Bike-Pooling

Quick Ride intelligently matches riders and ride takers with an objective of cost saving, traffic congestion reduction, decrease transit times and reducing air pollution.

The app allows vehicle owners to choose the cost with default recommended fare of INR 3 per km, which can vary from INR 0-5 per km depending upon the vehicle type.

Further, the vehicle owners have to pay 6% commission for every ride to the company for every ride undertaken through it as a service fee to cover technology development, cloud infrastructure and payment gateway charges. Interestingly, it also lets vehicle owners offer a free ride as a green initiative or purely for sharing purpose — the company does not charge any commission in such a case.

Rao said that the company has been operationally profitable and can look at overall profitability over the next few years. According to him, its innovation in product, user-friendliness, intelligent route match technology and existing network will be the strength for the company to achieve the expected 12 to 15 times growth in the next one year.

The company is operational in major metro cities such as Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai. However, Bengaluru remains its largest market.

Rao further divulged that out of its 60K daily rides, 7K rides are bike-pooling rides while the rest are carpooling rides. Till last year, the company was facilitating 10K rides and claims to have grown 6 to 7 times over the last year.

Shared Urban Mobility In India

With urbanisation making traffic snarls increasing prevalent in India’s cities, car and bike-pooling has become a necessity for commuters. In this age, people share living spaces through startups like CoLive and Zolo, share clothes via apps such as FlyRobe and share cabs through Ola and Uber.

However, in another ray of change in the way Indians travel, there are apps such as Bounce, LetsRide, and ZoomCar which are helping in traffic congestion and cost savings by making efficient use of cars and bikes on the road.

Also, according to a Statista report, revenue in the ride-sharing segment amounts to $371 Mn in 2018 and is expected to show an annual growth rate of 19.6%, resulting in a market of $761 Mn by 2022. A study by the global research organisation World Resources Institute (WRI) found that India’s car-sharing industry is growing rapidly and it could potentially reduce car ownership in the long term.

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Inc42 Daily Brief

Stay Ahead With Daily News & Analysis on India’s Tech & Startup Economy

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