As the Twin Cities inflates with Super Bowl fans, celebrities and media personnel next week, a new ride-hailing platform hopes to take advantage of the activity.
Looking to become the future of ride-hailing services like Uber and Lyft, startup Corbata was developed by three Minnesota natives and plans to provide rides next week to a small pool of people during the Super Bowl.
Though a web application is live, they hope to make the platform more widely available by summer 2018 with the release of Corbata's iOS and Android mobile applications.
Co-founder Jon Schoen sees his company as a service providing more than just a ride.
Like Lyft, Uber and other ride-hailing companies, Corbata's drivers set their own schedules, drive their own vehicles and get paid for their services. But Schoen and co-founders Lance Conger and James Kruse said they want the similarities to stop there.
"As opposed to taking cuts like Uber does … we are taking no cuts at the moment, just a booking fee to the user," Schoen said.
The company was born two years ago after Schoen and Kruse, who is Corbata's president, met in Los Angeles and connected over their dissatisfaction with Uber and Lyft.
Kruse and Schoen were frustrated with expensive Uber rides during surge times and heard drivers complain about the company's pay structure.