These Are the Best Cities for Uber and Lyft Drivers (Infographic)San Francisco-based software platform Zen99 analyzed a handful of criteria that make a metro area likely to be profitable for drivers on ridesharing platforms.
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When you think of cities where ridesharing technology companies likeUberandLyftare thriving, San Francisco and New York might be the cities to instantly jump to mind. That makes sense: Uber and Lyft both launched in San Francisco, and New York is filled with people who don't own cars.
But there are other cities in the U.S. -- like Washington, D.C., Boston, Atlanta and Seattle -- where drivers for these companies have an opportunity to make bank. That's according to some pretty nifty data analysis done by San Francisco-basedZen99, a financial software company that aims to help 1099 contract workers, particularly those in the sharing economy, organize their earnings and taxes.
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多少百分比的城市populat Zen99检查ion depends on cars, what portion of the population is young (and therefore more likely to try newfangled smartphone technology that requires hoping in a car with a stranger) and the standard costs of maintaining a car. The company also factored in local weather conditions and average commute times. (That's important: Waiting for a bus when it's cold and raining is decidedly not cool and may make a consumer significantly more likely to pay for a car. )
Have a look atthe infographicembedded below for more data on what makes a metropolitan area especially sharing-economy friendly. For true data nerds, there's more analysis on ridesharing-attractiveness for another sixty-some citieshere.
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