Does anyone understand what goes into Ubers sales and marketing expense? It appears they are spending roughly 500mm a quarter on this line item which is enough to eat up most of their entire gross profit. Are their high Sales and marketing costs a function of their high driver churn?
> Does anyone understand what goes into Ubers sales and marketing expense?
I would guess free rides for new rider signups, promotions to get regular users (gotta boost dem revenue figures, drivership, and rideership numbers for the IPO) and driver cash incentives to sign-up and later drive during specific periods of time.
(To get more info I clicked "GET THE ENTIRE 57-PAGE REPORT" which however led to a page thanking me for signing up, apparently for a free trial etc. Uh..No thanks.)
So.. that seems very dodgy - you want to read more info, so get roped into signing up for a free trial, and what you get is exactly what you've just read. That seems somewhere between totally misleading and blatant lying.
>Uber’s losses today are the stuff of startup legend.
>In Q3’18, the company reported another quarter in the red. Revenues rose nearly 40% year-over-year to $2.95B, but the company still lost more than $1B on a GAAP basis.
(I've managed to hardly read anything about Uber before on here, so excuse the naïvety)
So it's virtually a pyramid scheme?! Sounds like the main benefit for drivers (apart from low wages) is a large bonus for referring other new drivers. Uber spends most money getting more drivers, and ever expanding. The early drivers got paid well (from bonuses), and so do those running the company, I assume. So when the global supply of new drivers runs out,..what?
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 31.9 ms ] threadI would guess free rides for new rider signups, promotions to get regular users (gotta boost dem revenue figures, drivership, and rideership numbers for the IPO) and driver cash incentives to sign-up and later drive during specific periods of time.
(To get more info I clicked "GET THE ENTIRE 57-PAGE REPORT" which however led to a page thanking me for signing up, apparently for a free trial etc. Uh..No thanks.)
From the article:
>Uber’s losses today are the stuff of startup legend.
>In Q3’18, the company reported another quarter in the red. Revenues rose nearly 40% year-over-year to $2.95B, but the company still lost more than $1B on a GAAP basis.
So it's virtually a pyramid scheme?! Sounds like the main benefit for drivers (apart from low wages) is a large bonus for referring other new drivers. Uber spends most money getting more drivers, and ever expanding. The early drivers got paid well (from bonuses), and so do those running the company, I assume. So when the global supply of new drivers runs out,..what?