What does your Uber driver think of you? Photograph via Shutterstock.
You might think twice the next time you’re in an Uber car and on the verge of behaving
badly. You could get a bad rating!
Any regular user of Uber, the car service app, is familiar with its rating system.
After the driver has dropped a passenger at his or her destination, the passenger
rates the driver on a scale of 5 stars. A number of Uber users think it goes just
one way. It doesn’t. The drivers rate the passengers on the same 5-star scale. In
a type-A hub such as Washington, it’s just one more competitive hurdle to cross.
But Rachel Holt of the DC Uber office says the system of rating passengers exists for the same reason
as rating drivers. “It’s about maintaining an excellent experience for both the rider
and the driver.” Still, what if a passenger receives a consistently low score, never
rising above one star? “I think we’d wonder what was causing that. We don’t routinely
do an analysis. We might reach out to the client and ask what’s going on. We would
want to see what we can do.”
At the same time, we wondered if there was a reward for passengers who regularly score
at the top of the scale. You know, brownie points? “No, no reward system,” she said.
“But when clients say really outstanding things about drivers and drivers about clients
we pass that information on.” What about an extra tip, just to ensure a high rating?
She stuck to the company line on that and said tips are included in the rate and
no additional tip is expected.
To its credit, though, Uber does have a sense of perspective. According to Holt, “If
every time a client gets in and throws up we are going to be upset, yes. But we’re
not concerned about whether they say ‘please’ or ‘thank you.’ ”
In the instance of a vomit episode, we think a whole lot more than “please” and “thank
you” would be in order. Or face being banned from Uber. Think about the shame.
Did You Know That Uber Drivers Rate Passengers, Too?
The car service’s star system works both ways.
You might think twice the next time you’re in an Uber car and on the verge of behaving
badly. You could get a bad rating!
Any regular user of Uber, the car service app, is familiar with its rating system.
After the driver has dropped a passenger at his or her destination, the passenger
rates the driver on a scale of 5 stars. A number of Uber users think it goes just
one way. It doesn’t. The drivers rate the passengers on the same 5-star scale. In
a type-A hub such as Washington, it’s just one more competitive hurdle to cross.
But
Rachel Holt of the DC Uber office says the system of rating passengers exists for the same reason
as rating drivers. “It’s about maintaining an excellent experience for both the rider
and the driver.” Still, what if a passenger receives a consistently low score, never
rising above one star? “I think we’d wonder what was causing that. We don’t routinely
do an analysis. We might reach out to the client and ask what’s going on. We would
want to see what we can do.”
At the same time, we wondered if there was a reward for passengers who regularly score
at the top of the scale. You know, brownie points? “No, no reward system,” she said.
“But when clients say really outstanding things about drivers and drivers about clients
we pass that information on.” What about an extra tip, just to ensure a high rating?
She stuck to the company line on that and said tips are included in the rate and
no additional tip is expected.
To its credit, though, Uber does have a sense of perspective. According to Holt, “If
every time a client gets in and throws up we are going to be upset, yes. But we’re
not concerned about whether they say ‘please’ or ‘thank you.’ ”
In the instance of a vomit episode, we think a whole lot more than “please” and “thank
you” would be in order. Or face being banned from Uber. Think about the shame.
Most Popular in News & Politics
Sandwich Guy Has Become DC’s Hero
How Washingtonians Can Run, March, and Rally Against the Trump Administration Takeover
Pirro’s Office Fails to Get Indictment Against Sandwich Guy
DC’s Police Union Head Is the Biggest Cheerleader of Trump’s DC Police Takeover
Health Officials Flee CDC After White House Fires Director, Tensions Between Parents and ICE Erupt in Mount Pleasant, and There’s a New Red Panda
Washingtonian Magazine
September Issue: Style Setters
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
These Confusing Bands Aren’t Actually From DC
Fiona Apple Wrote a Song About This Maryland Court-Watching Effort
The Confusing Dispute Over the Future of the Anacostia Playhouse
Protecting Our Drinking Water Keeps Him Up at Night
More from News & Politics
The “MAGA Former Dancer” Named to a Top Job at the Kennedy Center Inherits a Troubled Program
Epstein Survivors Will Rally in DC Today, Trump Denies That He Has Died, and Someone Is Dotting Capitol Hill Trees With Bananas
We’re Calling It Now: Sandwich Guy Is the DC Halloween Costume of the Year
No Phones Allowed at This New DC Bar. Seriously.
Trump Defies Internet Sleuths by Posting Furiously About Hulk Hogan and Other Stuff, Rudy Giuliani to Receive Nation’s Highest Civilian Honor, and Chester the Toucan Got Rescued in Arlington
These Confusing Bands Aren’t Actually From DC
How Washingtonians Can Run, March, and Rally Against the Trump Administration Takeover
Sandwich Guy Is Now Charged With a Misdemeanor, Trump Wants to Keep DC Safe From Brutalist Architecture, and Summer Is Officially Over