Uber is adding trip type preferences, more driver destinations, and long trip notifications for drivers. The changes come as tips to Uber drivers have hit $50 million:
"This week, we're going to hit $50 million dollars in tips for drivers," explained Uber's U.S. and Canada manager Rachel Holt. "We launched the tipping effort in three cities two months ago, but we didn't roll it out all over the U.S. until the middle of July. So we're really, really excited just to see how well that feature has done in just a short period of time."
That $50 million is a lot in context: Lyft has had the feature for years, and hit just $250 million in tips in July. Drivers have made around 200,000 phone calls to support, Holt says, since Uber introduced 24/7 phone service, and on average they reach an agent in less than 30 seconds. Eighty-five percent of drivers have said they're satisfied with the experience.
The new changes today are focused on adding more flexibility to the experience. If you're not super familiar with the driver experience, these might sound mysterious, but they're actually pretty straightforward, and each emphasizes greater freedom in how drivers manage their day.
Pay your Uber driver well, because Uber won't.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Monday August 28 2017, @12:12PM
That is wrong. They still have minimum wage, it's just lower than for non-tipped employees. And they will get paid the usual minimum wage, if tips are too small to make up the difference between the lower wage and the non-tipped minimum wage.
If they don't want those benefits enough to negotiate them with their employers, then I don't want those benefits for them enough to enact law. A healthy job creation environment is better for us than the current situation where employers are heavily regulated and cost of employing people are higher, and thus, less people employed at lower salaries.