No doubt the job is generously remunerated, but for John List it has another appeal; for data geeks, car apps are like gold mines – in the US alone, before the pandemic, there were two million Uber drivers, making tens of millions of trips each week. John List has spent his career studying economic behaviour in the real world, so working with Uber “was a dream come true”. With this cornucopia of information, he could analyse all sorts of consumer preferences: what kinds of cars people like, how far they typically travelled, and at what times, how they responded to a change in the price of fares. He could also learn the best way to apologise.
Related posts:
Singapore Marina Bay Mixed-Use Site May Attract Bids Above $800 Million Amid Housing Boom
Jeff Bezos Just Made His Biggest Donation Of Amazon Stock This Year
How South Africa’s Christo Wiese Sued His Way Back Into The Billionaire Ranks
What is the UK inflation rate and why is it so high?
House prices: What happens when they fall?
Butlin's: 1,000 jobs at risk when furlough ends
Treasury reconsidering Labour's plan for non-dom tax status
Are luxury beauty advent calendars a rip-off?
Housing demand wanes as buyers bank on interest rate cut
Billionaires Own 4% Of All Cryptocurrency Through Discrete Family Offices