Bid Map in New York — the operating reality
Bid Map ships against the New York operating geography as a structural object. Push dispatch treats drivers as interchangeable: the system picks one driver, fires an offer, and waits out the timeout. When that driver declines — wrong direction, end of shift, job too short — the offer cascades to the next candidate, and every hop adds seconds the passenger feels. Bid Map inverts the model for the jobs where it makes sense. Eligible pre-bookings and open jobs surface as pill markers on the live map to every nearby driver at once, with ETA and passenger count on the marker and a distinct marker for wheelchair-accessible work. Drivers who actually want the job tap to preview the route and pickup zone, then bid with one tap. The result is self-selection: the driver who wins the job is one who chose it, which is why operators running bidding models report materially fewer rejected dispatches. In New York, the feature posts cleanly against NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC) quarterly returns, vehicle inspection cycles, and the 13,500-vehicle scale that defines the market. JFK + LGA + EWR airport flows integrate natively where applicable.