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Can MaaS change users’ travel behaviour to deliver commercial and societal outcomes?
Highlights Quantify impacts of subscription bundles on travel behaviour and sustainability. Verify MaaS potential to achieve societal and commercial outcomes. Suggest a new commercial model for MaaS. Quantify the net impact of MaaS on car-based use and shared-mode volume. Perform an economic analysis of MaaS using transaction cost theory and market design.
Abstract Mobility as a Service, or MaaS, is a relatively new business model that aims to disrupt the passenger transport industry by integrating existing mobility services into an intuitive smartphone app that allows everyday travellers to search, book, use, and pay for all their transport needs. In a fully integrated ecosystem, MaaS is envisaged to integrate not only travel information and payment, but also mobility services and societal goals to obtain the so-called four levels of MaaS integration. This paper empirically assesses the prospects of having a commercially viable and environmentally sustainable MaaS. Leveraging high-quality data collected by GPS-tracking technology, ticketing management systems, and survey questionnaires over the five-month in-field trial of MaaS in Sydney, this paper develops a discrete-count modelling system to quantify, for the first time, the impacts of MaaS on users’ travel behaviour and extra volume/revenue for shared modes. Based on the quantitative evidence obtained, the paper suggests a new commercial model for MaaS and identifies the likely opportunities and challenges faced by MaaS integrators.
Can MaaS change users’ travel behaviour to deliver commercial and societal outcomes?
Highlights Quantify impacts of subscription bundles on travel behaviour and sustainability. Verify MaaS potential to achieve societal and commercial outcomes. Suggest a new commercial model for MaaS. Quantify the net impact of MaaS on car-based use and shared-mode volume. Perform an economic analysis of MaaS using transaction cost theory and market design.
Abstract Mobility as a Service, or MaaS, is a relatively new business model that aims to disrupt the passenger transport industry by integrating existing mobility services into an intuitive smartphone app that allows everyday travellers to search, book, use, and pay for all their transport needs. In a fully integrated ecosystem, MaaS is envisaged to integrate not only travel information and payment, but also mobility services and societal goals to obtain the so-called four levels of MaaS integration. This paper empirically assesses the prospects of having a commercially viable and environmentally sustainable MaaS. Leveraging high-quality data collected by GPS-tracking technology, ticketing management systems, and survey questionnaires over the five-month in-field trial of MaaS in Sydney, this paper develops a discrete-count modelling system to quantify, for the first time, the impacts of MaaS on users’ travel behaviour and extra volume/revenue for shared modes. Based on the quantitative evidence obtained, the paper suggests a new commercial model for MaaS and identifies the likely opportunities and challenges faced by MaaS integrators.
Can MaaS change users’ travel behaviour to deliver commercial and societal outcomes?
Ho, Chinh Q. (author)
Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice ; 165 ; 76-97
2022-09-11
22 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Mobility as a Service , MaaS trial , Travel behaviour , Commercialisation , Societal goals , Decarbonisation , MaaS , TSP , Transport Service Provider , TEC , Transaction Cost Economics , PT , Public Transport , SP , Stated Preference , RP , Revealed Preference , SGMA , Sydney Greater Metropolitan Area , PAYG , Pay as you go , IC , Incentive compatibility , IR , Individual rationality
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