• CurlyWurlies4All
      link
      fedilink
      English
      251 month ago

      Nah it’s worse than that. The economics of the model are bad. It essentially relies on delivery drivers having to survive on tips and nothing more.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        4
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        That’s always how it’s been though. The difference is that in-house delivery is actually optimized for delivery volume, and restaurants which don’t have that volume or workflow just don’t have in-house delivery. When I drove pizza in college, I would take like 5 or 6 deliveries per hour, all within a 10 minute radius. Turnaround time from getting to the restaurant and back out the door would be a minute or two, and I’d leave with at least three different orders. That was good for $50/hr in tips during the dinner rush. Even a regular weeknight would be good for $100-150 in a 6 hour shift.

        With the app ecosystem, it’s just impossible hit that kind of efficiency because you are almost always taking one order at a time, and you end up waiting on the restaurant most of the time.

    • @jeffwOP
      link
      81 month ago

      Apps destroyed food delivery

    • @stoly
      link
      31 month ago

      No. Delivery is broken. Fees commonly go to double the food cost just because a few companies own everything. It’s like ticket master.