1 / 15

Planning, Marketing and Operating The Three Legs of the Ridership Stool

Planning, Marketing and Operating The Three Legs of the Ridership Stool. FTA Region 1 Ridership Symposium May 21, 2008 Lowell, Massachusetts Ron Kilcoyne, CEO Greater Bridgeport Transit. Ridership is the Bottom Line.

hertz
Download Presentation

Planning, Marketing and Operating The Three Legs of the Ridership Stool

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Planning, Marketing and OperatingThe Three Legs of the Ridership Stool FTA Region 1 Ridership Symposium May 21, 2008 Lowell, Massachusetts Ron Kilcoyne, CEO Greater Bridgeport Transit

  2. Ridership is the Bottom Line For every benefit that transit can offer a community, the greater the ridership, the greater the benefit.

  3. The “Legs” of Transit • Product Design • Promotion and Public Information • Product Delivery

  4. The First Leg – The Product • Service frequency • Service span • Route design • Directness • Coverage • Price • Access

  5. The First Leg – Service Levels Demonstrated Outcomes: • Study after study has revealed the single biggest factor to increasing ridership is the amount of service we provide - frequency, service span, coverage • Frequency often trumps speed or travel time as a factor of transit use • Everything else we can do to encourage and sustain ridership is moot without high levels of service • A high level of service takes dollars

  6. The First Leg – Service Levels

  7. The First Leg – Price Sell Time: • A majority of the cost of driving is fixed • When driving - individuals do not pay on a per trip basis The more you drive the more value that you get from your car - this concept should also apply to transit.

  8. The First Leg – Price Ziptrip – GBT Only Sells Time: $1.50 – 90 minutes $3.00 - all day $15.00 – 7 days $60 – 31 days

  9. The First Leg – Access • Stop segregating “internal” and “external” factors • Consider the whole trip • Identify barriers • Get engaged in development/urban design

  10. The First Leg – Business Districts • Become the mobility manager for dense commercial or mixed-use areas • Look for opportunities to reduce the demand for parking • Two of four transformative concepts • Eco passes • Car sharing

  11. The Second Leg – Promotion and Public Information • How easy can a new customer figure out how to use your system? • What can you do to entice new customers to sample your system? • What can be done to encourage existing customers to use other services you provide?

  12. The Second Leg – Promotion and Public Information The other two transformative concepts: • Automated trip planning • Real time information

  13. The Third Leg – Product Delivery The basics that keep the customer coming back: • Reliable – on time • Friendly drivers • Clean vehicles • Well maintained vehicle – breakdowns rare • Safe

  14. Conclusion Growing Ridership is Job #1 Growing ridership is an attitude There are no transit dependents Growing and sustaining ridership requires a holistic approach

  15. Thank You. Planning Marketing and OperatingThe Three Legs of the Ridership Stool Ron Kilcoyne, CEO Greater Bridgeport Transit

More Related