Inspired by the home and apartment-sharing startup Airbnb, FlightCar allows car owners to park free at select airports in exchange for sharing their vehicle.
This daring concept is the lovechild of Shri Ganeshram, Rujul Zaparde and Kevin Petrovic. The three men founded FlightCar after taking a good, hard look at Airbnb. They believed that if people are willing to share their most valuable asset (their home), they might be willing to share their second-most valuable asset (their car).
"We applied in May [2012] to a startup accelerator called The Brandery in Cincinnati," Zaparde told Benzinga. "We were accepted. We moved there, went through the program, and then launched in February of this year."
The Brandery provided FlightCar with $20,000 in startup funds, mentoring opportunities and other benefits. From there, the car-sharing startup raised $570,000 in seed funding from SV Angel, YC VC, TEEC Angel Fund and a handful of others.
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FlightCar raised an additional $5.5 million from General Catalyst Partners, Brian Chesky (founder and CEO of Airbnb), Softbank Capital, and Alexis Ohanian (co-founder of Reddit), to name a few.
"I think they buy into the concept," Zaparde said of FlightCar's investors. "I think Airbnb has been the poster child for the sharing economy and they see potential for other startups and other companies in the sharing economy, so I think that's where they're coming from."
Before launching FlightCar, Zaparde and his co-founders spent a couple of weeks talking to people at San Francisco International Airport. They boarded the airport shuttle several times to interview travelers and gauge their interest in sharing an automobile.
Roughly twenty percent said that they might be willing to list their vehicle with FlightCar -- in exchange for free parking and a small mileage fee. A larger, unspecified number of travelers said that while they may not be willing to share their own care, they are okay with the idea of renting a vehicle that belongs to another individual.
"If you're an owner, we will wash and vacuum the car before and after it gets rented," said Zaparde. "We haven't had that many issues with cars coming in completely trashed from the owners. I'm sure there have been a couple of instances where they were so dirty we couldn't rent it out. If it is like that, we'll do our best to clean it."
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In the event that a car is too dirty to properly clean, Zaparde said that FlightCar will let the vehicle sit in its lot until the owner returns to pick it up.
"We haven't had any issues where a renter trashed a car," he added. "Somebody will forget their Starbucks drink or a bag of chips. But I can't think of any time where there was an issue. If there is something like that, we'll charge the renter and go and get the car detailed at a local facility."
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