AT A GLANCE

Lyft
SpaceX
2012
Founded
2002
San Francisco, California
HQ
Hawthorne, California
$5.1 billion
Total Raised
$9.9 Billion
Logan Green, John Zimmer
Founder
Elon Musk
Mobility
Type
Aerospace
Public (NASDAQ: LYFT)
Status
Private ($350B valuation)

FUNDING HISTORY

Lyft

Series A2013
$15M raised
Series C2014
$250M raised
Series D2015
$530M raised$2.5B val.
Series G2017
$600M raised$7.5B val.
Series I2018
$600M raised$15.1B val.
IPO2019
$2.3B raised$24.3B val.

SpaceX

Founding2002
$100M raised
Series C2008
$20M raised$500M val.
Series D2012
$30M raised$2.4B val.
Series F2015
$1.0B raised$12.0B val.
Series I2019
$1.3B raised$33.3B val.
Series N2021
$1.9B raised$74.0B val.
Series O2022
$2.0B raised$137.0B val.
Tender Offer2024
$1.8B raised$350.0B val.

BUSINESS MODEL

Lyft

Lyft takes a commission on every ride — typically 20-25% of the fare. The driver gets the rest plus tips.

Revenue also comes from service fees charged to riders, subscription products (Lyft Pink at $9.99/month for discounted rides), and bike and scooter rentals in select cities.

The economics are straightforward but brutal. Each ride has a driver who needs to be paid enough to show up, a rider who needs a low enough price to choose Lyft over alternatives, and Lyft's cut has to cover platform costs, insurance, customer support, and hopefully generate profit.

The margins are thin — gross margins hover around 45%, and after operating costs, the company has been unprofitable for most of its existence.

Advertising is an emerging revenue stream. Lyft Media places ads on in-car tablets, the Lyft app, and bike-share stations.

It's small but growing and high-margin compared to the ride business.

SpaceX

SpaceX makes money three ways. First, launch services — companies and governments pay SpaceX to put their satellites into orbit.

A Falcon 9 launch costs about $67 million, which undercut the competition by 75% when it debuted. Second, Starlink — SpaceX's own satellite internet constellation, which is now generating over $6 billion in annual revenue from 4+ million subscribers.

Third, government contracts — NASA pays SpaceX to ferry astronauts to the International Space Station and the DoD pays for national security launches.

The secret sauce is reusability. Before SpaceX, every rocket was used once and thrown into the ocean.

SpaceX figured out how to land the first stage booster back on Earth and fly it again. A single Falcon 9 booster has flown over 20 times.

That's like the difference between throwing away an airplane after every flight versus keeping it for decades.

HOW THEY STARTED

Lyft

Logan Green was obsessed with transportation. Growing up in Los Angeles — the car capital of America — he spent his college years studying why American cities were so car-dependent and how ride-sharing could fix it.

In 2007, at age 23, he started Zimride (named after Zimbabwe, where he'd seen communal minibus sharing), a long-distance carpooling platform for college campuses.

John Zimmer was a hospitality management student at Cornell who joined Zimride early on. The two realized that while Zimride worked for planned trips, there was no good solution for on-demand rides within a city.

Uber had launched UberCab in 2010 as a black car service, but it was expensive — a luxury product.

In 2012, Green and Zimmer pivoted Zimride into Lyft, launching a peer-to-peer ride-sharing service in San Francisco. The differentiator was branding: Lyft was friendly, casual, approachable.

Riders sat in the front seat. Cars had giant pink fuzzy mustaches (later replaced by a glowing dashboard amp).

Drivers fist-bumped passengers. It felt like getting a ride from a friend, not hailing a cab.

They eventually sold the original Zimride carpooling platform to Enterprise Rent-A-Car and went all in on Lyft.

SpaceX

In 2001, Elon Musk had just sold PayPal to eBay for $1.5 billion and was sitting on roughly $180 million after taxes. Most people would buy an island.

Musk decided to buy rockets. His original idea was even weirder — he wanted to send a small greenhouse to Mars called "Mars Oasis" to reignite public interest in space exploration.

He flew to Russia three times to buy refurbished ICBMs. The Russians kept raising the price and at one point literally spat on him.

On the flight home from that last failed Russia trip, Musk opened a spreadsheet and started calculating the raw material costs of building a rocket from scratch. He realized the materials were only about 3% of the typical price of a rocket.

The rest was markup, inefficiency, and monopoly pricing by companies like Boeing and Lockheed Martin. He decided to build his own.

SpaceX was founded in June 2002 in a warehouse in El Segundo, California. Musk put in $100 million of his own money.

He hired Tom Mueller, a legendary rocket propulsion engineer who had been building rocket engines in his garage as a hobby. The first rocket, Falcon 1, was supposed to be the cheapest orbital rocket ever built.

It took six years and three spectacular explosions before it finally worked.

HOW THEY GREW

Lyft

Lyft's original growth strategy was being the anti-Uber. When Uber was mired in scandals — the Susan Fowler sexual harassment revelations, the "God View" privacy scandal, Travis Kalanick's combative leadership — Lyft positioned itself as the ethical alternative.

The #DeleteUber movement in 2017 sent a wave of riders to Lyft.

Market focus was another differentiator. While Uber expanded to 70+ countries, Lyft stayed focused on the US and Canada.

The theory was that winning one market deeply was better than spreading thin globally. This kept costs lower but also capped the growth ceiling.

Bike and scooter integration was the multimodal play. Lyft acquired Motivate (the largest bike-share operator in the US, running Citi Bike and others) in 2018 for $250 million, adding an entire transportation layer that Uber didn't have.

In dense urban areas, bikes often beat cars for short trips.

SpaceX

SpaceX's growth strategy was simple: be cheaper than everyone, then be better than everyone, then be the only option.

They started by undercutting the launch market. The United Launch Alliance (Boeing + Lockheed Martin joint venture) was charging $300-400 million per launch.

SpaceX offered $67 million. Government agencies and commercial satellite companies started lining up.

Reusability was the real game-changer. Landing a rocket booster looked like science fiction when SpaceX first attempted it in 2013.

They failed over and over — spectacular ocean landings, explosions on drone ships, near-misses. But in December 2015, a Falcon 9 first stage landed back at Cape Canaveral.

It was the first time an orbital-class rocket had ever landed after a mission. Now they do it routinely — it's almost boring.

Starlink created a completely new revenue stream. Instead of just launching other people's satellites, SpaceX launched thousands of its own.

By 2024, Starlink had over 4 million subscribers and was generating billions in revenue. It turned SpaceX from a launch company into a telecom company.

THE HARD PART

Lyft

Uber is the problem that never goes away. Uber has 72% of the US ride-share market to Lyft's 28%.

Uber has global scale that generates massive data advantages, cross-selling opportunities (Uber Eats), and brand recognition. Every dollar Lyft spends on marketing, Uber can match and triple.

The market share gap has been stable for years, and closing it seems nearly impossible.

Profitability has been elusive. Lyft went public in March 2019 and lost money every quarter for nearly six years.

The company has cut staff aggressively — laying off 13% of employees in late 2022 and another 26% in April 2023. Only in Q4 2024 did Lyft post its first quarterly profit as a public company.

Autonomous vehicles are both an opportunity and a threat. If self-driving technology works, it eliminates the biggest cost in ride-sharing: the human driver.

But Lyft sold its autonomous vehicle division (Level 5) to Toyota's Woven Planet in 2021 for $550 million. Now they partner with AV companies instead of building their own technology.

If Uber or Waymo crack autonomous rides first, Lyft could become irrelevant.

SpaceX

The early days nearly killed the company. SpaceX's first three Falcon 1 launches all failed.

The first one in 2006 crashed 25 seconds after liftoff due to a corroded fuel line nut. The second in 2007 reached space but the second stage shut down early.

The third in 2008 failed because the first and second stages collided during separation. Musk had enough money for one more attempt.

If flight four failed, SpaceX was dead.

Flight four worked. On September 28, 2008, Falcon 1 became the first privately developed liquid-fuel rocket to reach orbit.

Musk has said he was so stressed during that period he was throwing up regularly.

The financial pressure was existential. Musk was simultaneously funding Tesla, which was also on the brink of bankruptcy in 2008.

He had to split his last $40 million between the two companies. He borrowed money for rent.

But right at the end of 2008, NASA awarded SpaceX a $1.6 billion contract to resupply the International Space Station. That contract saved the company.

Starship development has been its own saga. The rocket has exploded multiple times during testing.

Each failure costs hundreds of millions. But SpaceX treats failures as data — they move faster by blowing things up and iterating than competitors do by being cautious.

THE PRODUCTS

Lyft

Lyft Rideshare — the core ride-hailing platform matching riders with drivers in 600+ cities across the US and Canada. Lyft Pink — a subscription program ($9.99/month) offering 5% off rides, priority airport pickups, free roadside assistance, and discounted bike/scooter rides.

Lyft Bikes & Scooters — micromobility options in select cities including the iconic Citi Bike system in New York City (operated by Lyft since 2018). Lyft Autonomous — partnerships with autonomous vehicle companies including Motional and May Mobility to offer self-driving rides in select markets.

Lyft Media — an advertising platform placing ads across Lyft's digital and physical touchpoints including in-app, in-car tablets, and bike-share stations.

SpaceX

Falcon 9 is the workhorse — the most-launched rocket in the world. It carries satellites to orbit and astronauts to the ISS, and the first stage lands itself for reuse.

Falcon Heavy is three Falcon 9 boosters strapped together — the most powerful operational rocket in the world until Starship came along. Dragon is the spacecraft that carries astronauts and cargo to the ISS.

It's the only American vehicle currently flying humans to space. Starlink is the satellite internet service — over 6,000 satellites in orbit delivering broadband to 100+ countries.

Starship is the big one — the tallest and most powerful rocket ever built, designed to carry 100+ people to Mars. It's still in testing but has already completed a full flight.

WHO BACKED THEM

Lyft

Andreessen Horowitz led the Series A and was an early champion. Founders Fund invested early.

Fidelity, Alphabet (Google's parent), and Alibaba participated in later rounds — notably, Alphabet invested $1 billion in Lyft while simultaneously developing Waymo, a potential competitor. The March 2019 IPO raised $2.3 billion at a $24 billion valuation — Lyft beat Uber to the public markets by six weeks.

SpaceX

Founders Fund, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Google, Fidelity Investments, Valor Equity Partners, Baillie Gifford, a]6z (Andreessen Horowitz), NASA (as customer/partner)

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