Wearing your seatbelt is second nature to pretty much everyone, right? Get in the car, shut the door, put on your seatbelt. Well, it wasn’t always like that. In fact, it’s only been in the last three decades or so that seatbelt laws have become as rigid as we now know them to be. Believe it or not, for decades millions of Americans would drive and ride in cars without their seatbelts, blatantly risking their lives. 

There were excuses too: think, “it’s too constricting,” and, “I have trouble turning my head.” But beyond excuses, most people just weren’t conditioned to wear their seatbelts despite the increased odds of sustaining major injuries in an accident. Even kids in school were taught about people who would have survived car accidents had they been wearing their seatbelts. 

Thankfully, seat belt usage is now completely ingrained in our driving-obsessed culture. I believe that the twenty-first century version of the seatbelt dilemma is distracted driving, specifically using your device while you’re behind the wheel. The stats are dire. Distracted driving causes nearly 2 million accidents, 500,000 accidents, and over 3,000 deaths every year. And that’s just in the United States. 

In the spring of 2020 when life as we know it pretty much shut down, these accidents took a temporary pause – temporary because as soon as restrictions began lifting and people started venturing out again, deadly distracted driving reemerged with a vengeance. Fewer cars and less traffic led people to begin speeding more and with new data showing that consumers are now spending up to 4.2 hours a day on apps, device addiction is at an all-time high. These are the ingredients for what I’ve been calling, “the perfect storm of distracted driving,” where Americans are driving faster and looking at their devices more often. 

A slew of legislation has emerged in almost every state to increase fines and penalties for distracted driving, but there’s strong evidence showing that even though people are aware of the fines and penalties, they can’t help it- they need to see that text or tweet or Instagram post, which is one of the main reasons law enforcement remains skeptical. 

I was a victim of distracted driving. I was injured when a driver staring at his phone barreled straight for me while I was on my bike training for a triathlon. I had just sold my first startup, a translation app, and during my recovery I began thinking about what could be done to make looking at your phone while driving as verboten as not wearing your seatbelt. And just as importantly, how we could make NOT looking at your phone as ingrained as it is to wear your seatbelt. 

The solution we’ve created is This App Saves Lives (TASL), a free mobile app that rewards drivers who abstain from distracted driving. Drivers earn rewards points for time spent driving undistracted and those points are redeemable for awards from national and local brands like Reebok, Shake Shack, Urban Outfitters, Insomnia Cookies, Amazon, Target and more. Businesses want their customers to be safe and partnering with TASL is a simple way to encourage safe driving behavior while increasing foot traffic to their storefronts.  

TASL offers a “carrot not the stick approach”. That’s an important distinguisher, especially for highway patrol officials around the country who remain ambivalent about increased fines and tickets for distracted driving because harsher penalties have had little effect in changing driver behavior. 

The best way to change driving habits is through rewards, not punishments. Since launching, we’ve witnessed meaningful improvements in safe driving behavior across our nationwide audience of drivers. Thousands of rewards have been redeemed and every day drivers all over the country are downloading the app. These reward redemptions serve an important purpose: they show that folks aren’t just downloading the app and forgetting about it but instead are monitoring their points accumulation and earning rewards along the way. Drivers of all ages are responding to this rewards-based approach and using positive reinforcement to become safer drivers, something no piece of legislation or severe sanction can claim. 

Successfully changing driver behavior is only part of the solution though. Now, we must do for distracted driving what seatbelt proponents did and make the practice completely unacceptable. So, we’re expanding our efforts. We’ve already begun pilot programs with some of the country’s largest corporations who want to keep their employees safe and off their devices while driving and we’re building relationships with insurance companies who increasingly recognize the dangers of distracted driving and want to engage their customers in a non-transactional manner. 

Thankfully, life is getting back to normal and many of us will be driving to countless long-overdue get-togethers and reunions. TASL is doing our part to help people get there safely. Will you take the challenge and keep your eyes up and phone down to help make the roads safer?

Author(s)

  • Ryan Frankel

    Entrepreneur, Founder of This App Saves Lives, Mentor, Fitness Enthusiast, Proud Dad x2

    Ryan is the creator of Longevity Today (https://ryanfrankel.substack.com/), a longevity and wellness newsletter. Ryan is a serial entrepreneur and most recently was the Founder of This App Saves Lives, ("TASL"), a mobile app-based solution that rewards undistracted driving behavior. Previously, Ryan founded the online nutrition coaching platform, EduPlated. He was the CEO and Co-Founder of VerbalizeIt, a language translation services company featured on Shark Tank and which was acquired in 2016. Ryan is an author, Wharton MBA alumnus, mentor, Inc. Magazine Top 35 Under 35 entrepreneur and an Ironman triathlete. You'll find him residing just outside of Philadelphia with his wife, two kids, Golden Retriever and pair of running shoes.