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Software that finds you a car-pooling buddy

Software that finds you a car-pooling buddy

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 28 May 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

IT HERO AWARDS: Ottawa-based RideShark, another nominee at next month’s Information Technology Association of Canada IT Hero Awards event, is targeting businesses with Web-based software that links up car-poolers, walkers, cyclists and transit riders

 

Lewinson said that even if a public system is already up and running, many companies are looking to launch private systems in order to control the messaging and to collect emissions data.

 

A few years ago, Lewinson said, the number of Canadian companies with a sustainable commuting program could be counted on one hand, but the low-risk, high-reward nature of the software changed that.

 

“If you’re in the downtown core and have an excellent transit service, you may still have people that want a transit partner or somebody to travel with on the subway,” she said. “And if you’re in a remote area, like Northern suburbia in Toronto, car-pooling might provide an option for employees that wouldn’t be able to work at your location without it.”

 

With its incentive module, Lewinson said, companies can keep track of which employees are cycling, walking or car-pooling to work the most and dish out rewards such as gas cards.

 

On the back-end, every client gets an administration portal to manage the software and track emission savings. The software is written on the Microsoft ASP .NET 3.5 platform with RideShark achieving Microsoft Gold Certified Partner status in 2006.

 

RideShark currently owns a few dozen servers and hosts its IT operations at a Triple A data centre. All of RideShark’s users and apps share a single, common infrastructure and code base that is centrally managed at the data centre.

 

As the company continues to grow, Lewinson said, the biggest challenge will be to get the word out to more enterprises and cities.

 

RideShark is still fairly small company without a marketing department, and because the company’s product has global applicability, the organization is relying on positive word-of-mouth to spread its message.

 

Currently the company has about 40 clients, both in the private and public sector, including Canadian municipalities such as Ottawa and Halifax. The company operates as a division of SurveyPeople Corp.










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.
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