PaulH wrote:
Hi Guys, I’m a ‘newbie’ to this forum who’s looking to get some information from experienced people within the taxi industry.
We’re looking at setting up a website where customers enter the journey they wish to take and local private hire taxi firms are able to quote a fixed fee for that journey. If the customer finds the price acceptable, then they book the job online.
Presumably your inconsistent terminology means you're looking at both Hackney Carriages and Private Hire?
I don't see why not, because it's likely that both sides would want to engage with such a service, assuming it was viable, but that's another question entirely.
But have a read here at this recent discussion about terminology:
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=18752Quote:
1) Will private hire firms be comfortable providing (and sticking to) a fixed rate for local journeys?
Probably not if they use meters, whether or not they're set at HC rates. But more so on longer trips.
The problem with local journeys is that's there's just too many variables. For example, imprecision as to the pick up and destination, taking detours that weren't agreed beforehand (to pick up others, for example) or waiting time that wasn't annonced beforehand (eg going into a shop during the trip).
Thus if it's a run that takes a couple of hours then a two minute detour to pick up someone else or stopping for fags or a detour to a cash point isn't a big deal, but if it's a half-mile journey then it can become a big deal and cause friction.
Thus for a local journey to give qoutes the precise circumstances of the journey would have to be a agreed beforehand, but this is probably impractical, and the more local the journey is the more likely this is to apply.
I've done half-mile quoted local trips agreed by an office where. for example, when you arrive they expect you to go up two flights of stairs several times to get their personal possessions, put the car's seats down etc then do the same at the other end - ie effectively a small removal job - so a two-minute trip turns into twenty minutes.
Personally I wouldn't touch very local quoted journeys with a barge pole, but I daresay some PH firms would, particularly if they don't use meters.
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2) Who is responsible for setting the price of a journey? Is it typically the operator, or the driver?
Again unless there's meters involved it's generally the operator, although the driver could agree directly with the passenger if there's any change of route or whatever. If the vehicles are HCs then the driver may have some discretion as regards negotiating street hires, but again this varies depending on the precise arrangements.
But both sides are often not very good at communicating such matters with each other - or indeed may choose not to communicate such matters in certain circumstances - which may lead to friction between the operator and/or driver and/or passenger(s).
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3) How does the payment to taxi drivers work? Are the majority of drivers on payroll or self employed?
Very few are on PAYE if that's what you mean, but apart from that there are various arrangements, ie fixed wage, fixed wage plus part commission, split bags at various percentages before fuel, split bags at various percentages after fuel, fixed rental for vehicle, variable rental for vehicle - that probably covers the most common arrangments. The driver generally keeps any tips, but some owners even want a share of them.
But that's just for the drivers who don't own the vehicle. There's a good chance the driver will also own the vehicle, and he will normally pay a fixed fee to an office to provide him with work - unless of course he has a stake in the business taking the bookings - and will of course pay the other car running expenses, and what's left is his profit.
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Are there any common systems taxi operators use to book jobs in? If so, can people give me the details so I can check them out?
The only one I know much about is phone, pen and paper
