
Most cities are sharing mobility data. The ambition is evidence-based policy. The reality is a growing archive that almost nobody turns into decisions.
This is not a data problem. The data exists. Trip volumes, parking patterns, safety incidents, seasonal fluctuations — it's all there. The gap is between collection and action. Between having a dashboard and changing an infrastructure plan.
Operators face the exact same problem internally. They collect fleet telemetry, rider behavior data, and operational metrics. Most of it sits in monthly reports that confirm what operators already suspected. Very little of it triggers an actual change in vehicle positioning, pricing, or expansion planning.
The pattern is consistent: organizations invest heavily in data collection and far too little in the decision architecture that turns data into action. A city that knows where scooter trips cluster but doesn't redesign bike lanes around that data has the same problem as an operator that tracks utilization rates but doesn't adjust fleet distribution.
Data infrastructure without decision infrastructure is just expensive storage.
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