Zimride is Full Speed Ahead with $6 million

We are incredibly excited to announce that we have closed a $6 million Series A round led by Mayfield Fund with participation from our existing investors Floodgate and K9 Ventures. This is a huge milestone that will allow us to improve and expand the Zimride experience while attracting the talent that we need to grow. And it couldn’t have come at a better time, as we recently reached 100 university/corporate networks and 100 million miles driven within the Zimride network.

It’s hard to believe that less than two years ago we were working out of a cramped apartment, fueled primarily by an obsessive need to reinvent transportation and a scrappy determination to see our vision through. Now we have a nicer office, but we’re still scrappy, and yes, we’re still obsessed.

We have a dream of a world where getting a ride- whether it’s in a car, plane, train, or space shuttle- is simple, affordable, and fun. Humans are social beings and thrive on connecting with others. And as humans, we spend way too much time getting from point A to point B, often alone. We want to make life better by making travel an accessible experience where you can make new friends. Everyone should have the opportunity to travel, and no one should have to travel alone.

And no one should have to grow a company alone. Zimride is getting to where it needs to go because of the support of users like you, our ridiculously talented team, and our passionate investors.  Thank you for giving us a chance, giving us feedback, and sharing your inspiring stories of how Zimride has improved your lives. This has been an incredible ride, and we’ve only just begun. Thanks for joining us on this journey and helping prove that life is better when you share the ride.

– Logan & John

P.S. to join our team, check out our jobs page and drop us a line.

Heading to LA? There’s a route for that

SF to LAWe launched Zimride with the vision of building a new form of transportation by creating a community marketplace for drivers to monetize the empty seats in their cars. Today we are excited to announce the launch of our new public platform focused on popular routes.

Over the last four years, we’ve successfully launched Zimride communities at over 100 universities and companies across 30 states in the U.S. In each of these communities we’ve built up an active base of users sharing rides, whether it has been students sharing rides home on the weekend or people carpooling to work every day. In all, Zimride users have logged over 100,000,000 miles traveled.

But Zimride still hasn’t been for everyone. Today that changes. We are launching our first promoted route dubbed “the Sunshine Route”: San Francisco to Los Angeles. Over the last couple weeks, we have jump-started the route with an incredible team of route builders, so users will have options from Day One. So far during our week of testing, more than 50 seats have been booked and we currently have an inventory of 100 seats available. Seats are selling fast, so if you want a ride to LA book one today before they sell out:

Find a Zimride to LA

And for everyone who is driving to LA, you’ll receive a $20 driver bonus payout along with the money you charge for your seats by posting your SF > LA ride in the month of August:

Be a Zimride driver

SF to LA is just our first route and we’ll be launching more within the next few months. Let us know what you think and what route you want to see us launch next. For users who are part of private networks, nothing changes. You will still have access to your organization’s network to share rides with others in your trusted community or organization. However, private networks will be seeing several interface and functionality improvements over the next few months.

We have a lot more exciting news in store in the coming weeks, so make sure to stay tuned!

How Meeting Online Led to Naps in the Back Seat

Lawrence Berkeley Labs

From left to right: Jan McClellan, Paula Ashley, Jo Dee Widmayer, and Zaida McCunney

The following post was written by Julie Chao and originally published by our partners at Berkeley Lab.

For 12 years Zaida McCunney had been driving 400 miles a week, commuting between her home in Livermore and her job as an administrator in the Computing Sciences directorate. She was on her second Saturn, after putting 300,000 miles on the first one.

Then last February the Lab introduced the Zimride program, an online service that matches people for carpooling. She signed up, and within a couple months, she met three other Lab employees from Livermore and formed a carpool. More than a year later, the carpool is still going strong and the participants could not be happier.

“I save $250 a month on gas,” McCunney said. “My husband loves it. And I think I can keep my second Saturn a little longer.”

Adds Jan McClellan: “Oil changes, tires, everything, it just brought it all down.”

McCunney and McClellan, along with Jo Dee Widmayer and Paula Ashley, say the rules and clear organization of the carpool contribute to its success. The women meet in the morning in the large parking lot of a Livermore strip mall. They will wait no more than five minutes if someone is running late. No additional stops are allowed. Each person drives one day a week and then the fifth day is rotated so that everyone drives fives times a month.

Once they reach the Lab, the driver drops each person off at their building, and at the end of the day, picks each person up. Thanks to a new Lab initiative, the driver can park in a privileged blue triangle spot. “It’s door-to-door service—that feels special,” said McCunney. Added McClellan: “It’s nice when it’s rainy.”

The carpoolers also are strict about safety, such as following traffic laws and being diligent about car maintenance. “We want to incorporate the Lab’s safety rules in our carpool because I feel the carpool is an extension of the Lab,” McCunney said.

McCunney had previously wanted to carpool but commuted alone for 12 years because there was no mechanism for meeting other people. Since Zimride was introduced last year nearly 700 Lab employees have signed up, though the Lab doesn’t have access to how many carpools have been formed as a result.

The women joke about the slight trepidation they had getting in the car the first day with a total stranger, making sure their husbands knew the names of their carpool-mates. But now they easily share laughs and have no desire to go back to the days of solo driving. Widmayer, an administrator in the IT Division, said that what used to be a 90-minute commute now takes less than an hour. “The carpool lane on 680 has opened so we aren’t held back later in the evenings,” she said

McClellan, who works as an emergency services specialist in the Emergency Services Office, noted that a common fear of joining a carpool, one that she shared, was losing the flexibility to leave early or stay late in case of family or work emergencies. But the Alameda County Guaranteed Ride Home program, which provides a free ride home in a taxi or rental car in case of unexpected circumstances, took care of that fear. “I don’t think a lot of people know the program exists,” she said. “We’ve all got vouchers.”

Besides saving money on gas and car maintenance, there are other previously unforeseen advantages of carpooling. McCunney says she saves on cellphone costs because she used her commute time to make social calls. “Sitting in that horrible traffic every day, it was almost an hour on my personal cell,” she said.

They say they have been forced to become more efficient at work. “Because we do need to leave on time, you have to stay on schedule,” Widmayer said. “You have so much time to get all your work done, so you’re more efficient during the day.”

Plus, of course, there’s the benefit to the environment. “We’re reducing our carbon footprint,” said Widmayer. “We have three extra cars off the highway every day, three cars on the hill not taking up parking places.”

The carpool has only one rule that occasionally leads to discord: the front seat passenger is not allowed to nap. “At the end of the day, everyone fights for the back seat,” McCunney said with a laugh.

Calling all Burners: Zimride to the playa

Burning Man

Every year, tens of thousands of adventurous souls travel near and far to converge on the playa, Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, for the annual Burning Man festival. Due to high ridesharing demands, Craigslist’s rideshare section typically sees hundreds of Burning Man posts. But this year, Burners will have another way of getting there.

Zimride has developed an easier way for attendees who are offering or needing a ride to share their ride to the festival. Simply post your ride and see a list of Burners taking the same route. Unlike Craigslist, Zimride allows you to see profiles, pictures and music preferences before sharing the ride (or RV).

Like Burning Man, Zimride was founded with a focus on community. We believe communities are built on the shoulders of shared experiences, and we’ve set out to create a new form of transportation that’s built from the ground up with community participation.

If you’re heading to the playa and need a lift, we’ve got you covered.

For other events, check out the “Latest Events” section on www.zimride.com.

Zimride to CrunchUp and Summer Party at August Capital

Dave McClure

Today not only are we excited to launch our first public route (SF to LA) and a redesigned homepage, we are also announcing a free rideshare service for TechCrunch’s CrunchUp and Summer Party at August Capital. Anyone who has attended the party in the past knows that parking can be pretty crazy. So we setup two custom event pages so you share the ride with attendees here:

Entrepreneurs: Post your ride and tweet #pitchVCzimride to win a chance to “pitch and Zimride” with 1 of the following: Dave McClure (500 Startups), Ann Miura-Ko (FLOODGATE), Manu Kumar (K9 Ventures), Raj Kapoor (Mayfield Fund) and Kent Goldman (First Round Capital).

Inspired by Dave McClure’s use of entrepreneurs to get free rides to the airport, we wanted to extend this type of opportunity to the TechCrunch community. We will review best tweets and enter you to win!