Chinmay Malaviya and Charlie Depman found themselves at the center of the shared micromobility industry just as it took off, working for companies like Bird, Lime and Scoot. They experienced a rollercoaster ride of venture funding and skyrocketing demand, product pitfalls and regulatory hurdles. It was in the midst of this activity that the pair noted a shift in the industry and an opportunity.Â
âFrom our vantage point there was a massive shift happening in mobility and transportation, in terms of personal ownership,â Malaviya told TechCrunch in an interview last month. âPeople were looking for their own electric scooter, electric bike and electric moped.â
Malaviya and Depman, who met on LinkedIn, determined there wasnât a suitable way to research, vet and buy e-bikes, e-mopeds or e-scooters beyond Google and Amazon searches. And Ridepanda, an online marketplace for light electric vehicles, was born.
Itâs safe to call the pair âlight electric vehicleâ evangelists. They see Ridepanda, which raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from General Catalyst and Will Smithâs Dreamers Fund, as the best way to deliver on the mission of getting more electric bikes, scooters and mopeds in the publicâs hands.
âWe are all for cities that can be happier and efficient, if they run on these vehicles that are small, quiet eco-friendly and also a lot more fun,â said Malaviya, who added that light electric vehicles are particularly well-suited for the majority of trips people take, which data shows is up five miles.
The startup, which the pair launched in early 2020 and recently came out of stealth, aims to be one-stop âe-rideâ shop where customers can find a curated set of expert-vetted e-rides and a customization feature that helps shoppers home in on the right product. Ridepanda launched in late September, a new site with an improved user interface, a âridefinder quizâ that helps people find the right product as well as other support services. These support services, which are bundled and branded âpandacare,â connects users with information on insurance, home assembly, repair and maintenance plans as well as help finding the right helmet.
Visitors to Ridepanda will spot the âridefinder quiz,â which lets users select the electric bike, moped or scooter icon, their height and weight, top uses and finally, preferences like foldable or cargo and budget. The user is then given a few results that best match their selections. Users can skip this process and just conduct searches based on the three product types or use cases such as âcommute,â âadventure,â âdelivery,â or âaccessibility.â
Not just any electric bike, scooter or moped qualifies for Ridepandaâs site, said Depman, who is the companyâs CTO.
âWeâve seen like a Cambrian explosion of different vehicle types; there are literally hundreds of options out there,â said Depman. âIf you go on Amazon website, youâre going to see 150-plus in each category, and itâs really hard to sift through them. So what weâve been building on the back end is a vetting system.â
For a product to be included on the platform, it must meet certain criteria and rating. The company rates vehicles across performance, safety, sustainability, durability and repairability, Depman said. That rating is achieved by evaluating all the different components of the vehicle, including the battery, motor and brakes.
Ridepanda is focused on the U.S. market for now, particularly cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Portland, San Francisco and Seattle. The company offers customers financing and itâs even looking into a subscription service, although itâs unclear when or if that will roll out.
âBasically I think we are fighting the noise and the decision fatigue,â Malaviya said.
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