Amp Idea Preface

Intro

As two college students with nothing better to do in the summer, we decided to start an ambitious project of launching the first interactive advertising network in Boston cabs. At the time, we thought of it as a small stepping stone in our journey to build companies and at most could help us pay for school/secretly make us college-ballers. What started as some good fun ended up being the craziest 9 months; including being asked for bribes, learning about the Russian Mafia & money-laundering, out-competing a Fortune 500 company for market share, and raising capital during the worst recession since the Great Depression.

Back in 2008 – 2009, my co-founder, Sumant Yerramilly, and I co-founded and sold our first startup, Amp Idea Corp. Our biggest mistake was never writing about our journey for others to learn from. We made many mistakes and learned a tremendous amount about ourselves and business and made it out on the other side to tell our story.

Amp Idea started on the notion of developing credit card processing systems and advertising units for Boston taxis. Our mission was to revolutionize advertising forever by introducing an interactive medium that exists beyond your cellphone. We were looking at everything from digital billboards to restaurant units and even interactive billboards. However, it all started with our humble roots of taxi cab advertising in Boston, MA.

This story spans Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, and Chicago.

Before I begin, I’d like to offer some context.

Numbers

We were astounded by how big of an opportunity exists in the taxi industry. Now there’s players such as Uber, Square, and others after the market, it makes sense given the numbers. These are the numbers for the total market in Boston. We ended up with 340 cabs so divide the following by 6:

Cab Revenue

Total Cabs

1800

Daily Transactions/Cab

45

Monthly Transactions/Cab

1,350

Average Fare/Cab

$22.50

Monthly Revenue/Cab

$364.50

Total Monthly Revenue

$656,100.00

Total Yearly Revenue

$7,873,200.00

Credit Card Revenue

Ad Revenue

Credit Card Rate

2.00%

# Ads

10

Estimated Credit Cards (%)

60.00%

Average Price/Ad/Cab

$20.00

Estimated Credit Cards (#)

810

Monthly Revenue/Cab

$200.00

Total Monthly Revenue

$393,660.00

Total Monthly Revenue

$360,000.00

Total Yearly Revenue

$4,723,920.00

Total Yearly Revenue

$4,320,000.00

Players

Disclaimer: All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Boston Government – The mandate was led by Captain Pride who let his ego overshadow sound and logical judgement. He is no longer serving as the Hackney Commissioner and his original mandate for credit card processing was never taken seriously by any company or taxi professional.

Boston Cab Industry – This is a very complicated setup of cab associations (names on the cab e.g. Top Cab/City Cab, Boston Cab, Metro Cab, ITOA, etc.). See this post for more information.

MTSeats – NYC based company that was the first company to offer backseat advertising and credit card processing. The main person behind this company is Don Jerkman but the day-to-day is run by J.D. (short for Just Desperate). Don served on the TLC and ran experiments in his cabs prior to the official mandates.

TVS (Transportation Vehicle Systems) – In 2008, they were a joint venture with a large credit card systems manufacturer and a Spanish taxi equipment manufacturer. The main person is C.M. (short for child-molester).

CabTek – Tried and failed in NYC. Led by a former-lawyer turned entrepreneur named Jason Lee who tried to compete again in Boston.

Etc. – There were many others who will be introduced later that provided us some help, criticism, feedback, & competition.

These are the major players that affected our company the most.

Summarized Plot

We learned the art of the hustle by selling to the largest and most respectable ad agencies in the world. Amp Idea is a story that we’ll remember forever more than it being our first time but more about the tumultuous period that will define all of our future entrepreneurial activities.

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The Taxi Industry – Deja Vu in 2013

I just came across the uber lawsuit today (being sued by the boston taxi industry) & its deja vu all over again. I wanted to share my experience with the taxi industry, especially, since I’m seeing SO many startups in this space these days. About 4 years at my last startup, Amp Idea, we were one of the first one’s to create in-taxi credit card & entertainment terminals in Boston. We were luckily enough to get the city to pass a mandate requiring all taxis to adopt this technology. They saw it as an innovation that adds a tremendous value to the passengers & the industry – credit card acceptance.

What happened soon after? “Key” members in the boston taxi industry tried to sue the city & the vendors involved for mandating credit cards & ‘forcing’ drivers to accept vendors that were charging fees to accept cards.

The result? The lawsuit went no where & for those of you who live in boston today – know that every taxi is still equipped with these terminals.

Lesson? Industries that haven’t changed in decades are being disrupted with technology & innovation – rather than resisting this change – the taxi industry should embrace it & figure out a way how these technologies can help their business. Uber, Halo, & Fleetbit will happen – it will change the way we take taxis – it’s time for taxi commissions & unions across the country to come to terms with this before they become obsolete.

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