USA TODAY US Edition

Kids car company gets $3.9M to rev up

- Marco della Cava @marcodella­cava USA TODAY

With Uber all the rage among ride-hailing adults, it’s little wonder companies aiming for a more specific rider — children — are gaining momentum and backing.

Tuesday, Los Angeles-based HopSkipDri­ve announced a $3.9 million seed round, according to a statement from the company. The round was led by Upfront Ventures with participat­ion from FirstMark Capital, Maveron and BBG Ventures.

The funding will be used to scale the startup, which was founded by three time-crunched mothers with eight children between them.

“We created HopSkipDri­ve to solve the problem we each faced getting our own kids to school and activities,” Joanna McFarland, co-founder and CEO, said in a statement.

McFarland has a background in product management, Chief Operating Officer Carolyn Yashari Becher was a non-profit lawyer, and Chief Marketing Officer Janelle McGlothlin runs branding firm Writebrand Inc.

“General ride-sharing solutions don’t meet the needs of this unique market (with its) pre-arranged rides, strong focus on safety and specialize­d logistics not required for adult riders,” Upfront Ventures partner Greg Bettinelli added. “We see a real growth opportunit­y with this differenti­ated approach.”

In contrast to on-demand services such as Uber and Lyft, HopSkipDri­ve and Shuddle allow parents to book rides well in advance. Apps give details on the drivers coming to collect children and show the car in motion while it’s in progress. Most drivers are women with extensive child care experience.

Launched in March, HopSkipDri­ve now has more than 100 contracted drivers, all of whom go through a robust vetting process that includes interviews, vehicle-safety inspection­s and background checks that include TrustLine, a fingerprin­t-anchored scan for arrests that the California Public Utilities Commission requires of services that work with children.

HopSkipDri­ve’s more establishe­d Northern California rival, Shuddle (which has raised some $12 million since launching last fall), recently began running its contracted drivers through TrustLine.

Shuddle CEO Nick Allen agreed to the process after the CPUC issued Shuddle a ceaseand-desist order. But Allen maintains that Shuddle’s drivervett­ing process is more thorough than what state officials mandate and is hoping CPUC officials eventually change their standards.

“We’re not concerned about what other companies are doing,” McFarland told USA TODAY recently. “We consider TrustLine the gold standard and that’s why we use it.”

“We created HopSkipDri­ve to solve the problem we each faced getting our own kids to school and activities.” Joanna McFarland, HopSkipDri­ve co-founder and CEO

 ?? JEFF BENDER FOR HOPSKIPDRI­VE ?? From left, HopSkipDri­ve founders Carolyn Yashari Becher, Joanna McFarland and Janelle McGlothlin.
JEFF BENDER FOR HOPSKIPDRI­VE From left, HopSkipDri­ve founders Carolyn Yashari Becher, Joanna McFarland and Janelle McGlothlin.

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