Submitted
2020 Elevate Prize

Jetty

Team Leader
Cristina Palacios
About You and Your Work
Your bio:

Opportunities don’t come easy. I’m a mother of twin boys and co-Founder and co-CEO of Jetty (Jetty.mx), a company that develops technology for collective transport operators (public and private) with the goal of offering a safe and comfortable experience with highly qualified drivers. As a women entrepreneur working for ten years on the future of mobility in latinamerica I’ve learned that passion leads change. 

During my career I’ve worked on creating companies that use technology to improve people's lives. I started my first company on the future of mobility and sold it to a world leader in 5 years. This led me to become a partner of Innku, where I have actively participated in the creation of several companies: Briq.mx a crowdfunding platform that allows people to invest small amounts of money in real estate or CeroUno.io a coding school.

Project name:
Jetty
One-line project summary:
Using technology to shape the future of mobility in Latinamerica.
Present your project.

Everyday 1.7 million people travel daily from their homes in the suburbs to the downtown core of Mexico City. For the vast numbers of citizens who can’t afford a private car, commuting is a torture. Mobility alternatives are limited to either spending a fortune on taxis and ubers, or enduring low quality, largely informal transport services. 

Jetty is an app-based collective transport platform working since August 2017 in Mexico. We have improved the service of the transit industry by using mobile phones, GPS, digital payments, social networks, in-app feedback loops, and crowdsourced data to improve passenger experience, dignify the work for drivers, and enhance safety with gender and inclusion perspective. 

Recently, we adapted our technology to promote social distancing and minimize risk of on-board contagion of covid19. Technology should not be a privilege, public transportation can be safer, comfortable and reliable by adding a technological layer to improve services.

Submit a video.
What specific problem are you solving?

Jetty promotes a more safer and inclusive public transport.

  1. Safer: We adapted our technology to minimize covid-19 contagion on public transportation. Social distancing and mass transit are two concepts that don’t fit well together. According to MOOVIT, there has been a global reduction of public transport ridership down to 70% y 90%. Around the world there has been much discussion around the role of transit systems on covid-19 spread.  We are helping providers to reduce their reliance on cash payments, ban passengers that refuse to wear masks, limit the number of seats used, trace who boarded each vehicle, train drivers to sanitize vehicles and take passengers temperature, and inform passengers of exact departure times.

  2. Inclusive: According to CAF more than 70% of women in LatAm feel unsafe in their daily commutes. Also, CEPAL declared that people with disabilities are excluded from the transportation systems (pedestrians, passengers, drivers). Concerned about this situation, we developed a mobility disruption with gender perspective and inclusion. We collect data that shows the differentiated use of women and people with special needs (pregnancy, disability) and attends them during their ride.

We aim to scale our solutions throughout Latin American cities to shape the future of mobility.

What is your project?

Jetty helps public transport authorities and public or private transit operators adopt and embrace innovation. We do this by implementing a layer of technology on existing services, adding passenger and driver apps that eliminate (or reduce) cash payments, manage seat inventories, record who boards each vehicle, elicit passenger feedback, train drivers and inform passengers of exact departure times. 

We do not operate transport services directly. We develop and maintain technology needed to plan and regulate services, to help operators deliver flexible, demand responsive services, and to help passengers enjoy their daily commutes. We always use open source technologies and open communication protocols, unencumbered by restrictive licenses. 

Over time, we work with our public and private partners to draw insights from data collected, helping them finetune routes and schedules, optimize their vehicle fleets, identify workforce problems, adjust the location of stops and increase passenger satisfaction.

Who does your project serve, and in what ways is the project impacting their lives?

Even before COVID-19 struck, public transport in most Latin American cities was in shambles. Regulators had scant control and minimal information over services provided to the public. Planners lacked critical data for decision making, and missed vibrant channels of communication to engage passengers. Private operators had no incentives to deliver excellence, and routinely cut all possible corners: they contracted laughable insurance policies, avoided paying social security to their drivers, let their vehicles fall apart, postponed maintenance and filled their vehicles until they could not fit a pin. Sadly, the relationship between passengers, operators and government was structured to be adversarial.

We understand the reluctance to digital transformation and adaptation of technology. For these reasons, we offer immediate benefits: 

  • For transit providers: have a safe arrival planning system, supervision and monitoring tools for the drivers.

  • For passengers: access information on routes, stops, travel times and frequencies of the services; know who is their driver and vehicle; rate the service and give feedback on the travel experience; have real-time support attended by trained agents before, during and after the trip; possibility of recovering forgotten objects in units. 

Investing in mobility today is shaping the cities of the future.

Which dimension of The Elevate Prize does your project most closely address?
  • Elevating issues and their projects by building awareness and driving action to solve the most difficult problems of our world
Explain how your project relates to The Elevate Prize and your selected dimension.

2020 has been quite a ride for everyone involved in the collective transportation industry. People are working from home, and/or distrust transit more than ever. Amidst the pandemic, Jetty partnered with local governments, transport operators, international NGOs and development banks interested in exploring the future of urban transportation. 

Jetty is a transformational and innovative project that addresses mobility challenges with a tangible solution. We believe that mobility is a core challenge of the cities of tomorrow. Latin America needs a radically diverse and purpose-driven problem solver as myself to lead the new agenda for economic growth and recovery after covid-19.

How did you come up with your project?

In 2010, I co-founded Aventones in Mexico, a service that promoted corporate carpooling. We were swimming against the tide as everybody thought it was unthinkable to share a car with a total stranger! Uber and Airbnb didn’t yet exist so the concept of sharing economy was difficult to grasp. We quickly realized there was a market in Latin America. After launching in four more countries we positioned the company as the leader in the region. We piloted a vanpooling service (Vanpool.mx) to provide a more  professional service but this pilot had to be cut short as in 2015, Aventones was bought by the ridesharing world leader: BlaBlaCar, a company specialized in connecting drivers with passengers on long-distance trips.

Onesimo completed his doctoral studies at MIT, writing his dissertation on the formalization and professionalization of the jitney industry in Mexico City and Santiago, Chile. In 2015, he briefly explored a partnership with Bridj, a company that at the time operated a micro transit service in Boston, who wanted to expand to Mexico. The idea did however spark investor interest in Mexico City. 

When Onesimo approached me with an idea to change public transportation in Mexico we immediately clicked and co-founded Jetty. 

Why are you passionate about your project?

Quarantine challenged Jetty’s business model and purpose. Public transportation all over the world is facing bankruptcy and low demand. I am passionate about Jetty because together with the team we decided to use our resources to impact our community. 

Since March, with several local NGOS in Mexico City and donations of Jetty users, we have provided free and safe transportation of critical goods to hospitals. A few examples: With “Comida Solidaria” we partnered with a group of chefs, companies and civil society organizations to offer free daily meals to people from scarce resources in the context of the health emergency units. Another example, in collaboration with “Ya Respondiste Foundation” we deliver 150 to 300 balanced daily servings to Mexico City’s public hospitals.

Jetty knows how to adapt to  challenges. I launched the whitelabel program, making our technology available and easily accessible. We closed on our first contract under this model in May, with an operator in the city of Ecatepec, Mexico (fleet size 1600 vans).  In a few months we have redefined our business model to offer technology as a service for governments, bus operators and organizations interested in improving their transport service.

Why are you well-positioned to deliver this project?

I believe that actions and acknowledgments speak for themselves. We launched Jetty in 2017 as a fully-permitted on-demand electronic urban transport platform. In 2018 we evolved and developed an alliance with a micro mobility company (Mobike) and with a public transport operator who decided to use our technology (S VBUS).

 Over time, we partnered with several other transport companies who embraced our platform  and in the process  created an incipient MAAS platform capable of bringing together digital and analog transport service providers. Our platform helped passengers select among a plethora of options otherwise unavailable in the market: thanks to Jetty, they avoid transfers by choosing direct routes, or travel with more comfort by reserving a seat. 

In this period, we also started to work closely with local governments, leading some of our government partners, such as the State of Mexico Secretaría de Movilidad to review its regulations to facilitate technological innovation.

In less than a year since our initial launch, our solution started to be noticed. Forbes named us one of the 30 business promises. The World Summit Awards defined us as the 40 digital innovations that are revolutionizing the status quo. In 2019, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology distinguished us as a regional winner of the Inclusive Innovation Challenge (IIC), naming us one of the best solutions for the future of work1. We won the 2019 Keeling Curve Prize for Climate Solutions. And Google selected us for its 2019 Launchpad Accelerator Program.

Provide an example of your ability to overcome adversity.

The purpose of Jetty is not to compete with current transport operators or governments, but rather to help the population improve their travel experience and to contribute to more pleasant social environments. Our objective is to expand the urban passenger transport market, benefiting users, drivers, operators and governments.

Today Jetty is a proven platform in major cities and its peripheria that connects users, drivers and bus operators. Our technology has been used by more than 25,000 unique users, +300 drivers, 10 transportation companies, and three local governments in six cities. We have sold 1.5 million seats and supervised over 130,000 van and bus trips. Our apps have more than 100,000 downloads, rated as follows:

  • User  iOS  app- App Store- 4.8 of 5

  • User Android app - Play Store - 3.2 of 5

  • Driver Android app - PlayStore - 5 of 5

In four years of operations, we have learned a lot about how to manage complex urban challenges, establish lasting partnerships and implement cost-effective, creative solutions. We are ready to scale, and are actively trying to bring our technology to cities sharing our commitment to transform urban mobility systems.

Describe a past experience that demonstrates your leadership ability.

Resistance to digital transformation and innovation is always expected no matter the industry. As co-founder of Jetty I have faced plenty of challenges in its short history: blockades and threats from transport operators, outdated regulation from some authorities and initial distrust from our users. I have addressed these challenges with hard work, evidence-based pilots and alliances with local and global organizations.

Over the last four years I have led a team that has designed, developed and tested a system capable of transforming mobility in Latin American cities. Together we have studied the best practices in the industry, adopted the most advanced technology, recruited a great team of professionals, received advice from the best specialists in the field and proven solutions for a plethora use cases in real urban environments.

I believe that leadership in the mobility industry should be more diverse, inclusive and digital driven. More women should be part of the boards of companies, governments and academia working to solve the mobility challenges we face in Latin America. 

How long have you been working on your project?
It has been quite a ride! We founded Jetty in 2016
Where are you headquartered?
Mexico City, CDMX, Mexico
What type of organization is your project?
  • For-profit, including B-Corp or similar models
More About Your Work
Your Business Model & Funding
The Prize
Solution Team:
Cristina Palacios
Cristina Palacios
Co-Founder & Co-CEO