You book a prepaid auto or taxi
because you want certainty.
The destination is entered.
The fare is fixed.
The estimated travel time is displayed.
The payment is often made in advance.
Everything appears
predictable—except the journey itself.
What should be a simple ride from
Point A to Point B often turns into an exercise in patience, discomfort, and
anxiety. As customers, we aren't asking for luxury. We are simply asking for
the service we paid for: a safe, clean, and respectful ride.
The Promise vs. The Reality
Ride-hailing platforms have
transformed urban transportation. They offer transparent pricing, route
tracking, cashless payments, and convenience. Yet many passengers continue to
face problems that technology alone has not solved.
Rash Driving
Perhaps the biggest concern is
reckless driving.
Sudden acceleration, hard braking,
unnecessary overtaking, speeding through traffic, and ignoring basic road
etiquette leave passengers tense throughout the journey.
Many passengers spend the ride
holding onto the seat instead of relaxing. Reaching the destination safely
should never feel like surviving an adventure.
If the estimated travel time is
already calculated by the app, why is there a need to race against every other
vehicle on the road?
Driving safely should be the
priority—not shaving off two or three minutes.
A Clean Vehicle Shouldn't Be a
Luxury
Passengers often enter vehicles
with:
Dusty seats
Food wrappers
Strong tobacco smell
Cigarette smoke lingering inside
Poor ventilation
Unpleasant odors
A clean interior is not an
unreasonable expectation. It reflects professionalism and respect for the
customer.
Nobody should begin their day or
end a long journey in a vehicle that feels neglected.
The Uncomfortable Demand for Extra
Money
One of the most frustrating
experiences is being asked for additional payment after accepting a prepaid
ride.
Sometimes it is for traffic.
Sometimes it is for waiting.
Sometimes it is because the
destination is "too far."
Sometimes there is no clear reason
at all.
The entire purpose of a prepaid
service is to remove uncertainty. If passengers are repeatedly pressured to pay
extra, the very foundation of transparent pricing begins to crumble.
The Journey Matters as Much as the
Destination
Many service providers measure
success by one question:
"Did the passenger reach the
destination?"
Passengers ask a different
question:
"How did I feel during the
journey?"
A ride is not merely
transportation. It is part of someone's day.
It may be a parent travelling with
a child.
A senior citizen going to the hospital.
A student heading to an examination.
A business executive travelling to an important meeting.
The emotional experience of the
ride matters just as much as arriving on time.
Ratings Alone Don't Solve
Everything
Ride-hailing apps encourage
passengers to rate drivers.
But many customers hesitate.
Some fear retaliation during the
ride.
Others believe low ratings rarely
improve future experiences.
A rating system is valuable only
when it leads to meaningful improvements through driver training,
accountability, and regular monitoring.
Professional Driving Is a Skill
Driving professionally is about
much more than operating a vehicle.
It includes:
Smooth acceleration
Gentle braking
Maintaining safe distances
Respecting traffic rules
Keeping the vehicle clean
Being polite
Avoiding unnecessary phone usage
Respecting passenger comfort
These qualities distinguish a
professional driver from someone who merely knows how to drive.
Respect Goes Both Ways
Passengers also have
responsibilities.
They should arrive on time, treat
drivers respectfully, avoid making unreasonable demands, and maintain basic
courtesy.
Mutual respect creates better
journeys for everyone.
But respect should never come at
the cost of compromising passenger safety or comfort.
Technology Has Solved Pricing. Now
It Must Solve Quality.
Ride-hailing companies have
successfully solved problems like fare transparency, navigation, and digital
payments.
The next challenge is improving
the quality of every ride.
Imagine if platforms rewarded
drivers not only for completing trips but also for:
Smooth driving habits
Low harsh-braking incidents
Positive cleanliness feedback
Safe speeds
Consistent professionalism
Such incentives would improve the
experience for both passengers and drivers.
A Simple Wish
Passengers are not expecting
luxury sedans or five-star hospitality.
They simply want a ride that is:
Safe
Smooth
Clean
Smoke-free
Fairly priced
Respectful
When a ride is prepaid, the
customer should not have to negotiate comfort, cleanliness, or safety.
A journey should not end with
relief that it is finally over.
It should end with satisfaction
that the service delivered exactly what it promised.
Because in the end, transportation
is not just about reaching a destination—it is about how confidently,
comfortably, and safely you get there.

