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by tredre3 253 days ago
> I’m pretty sure DoorDash is the one who increases the price on their end, not the business

That is not correct. Doordash takes a 20-30% commission on each sale, so businesses preemptively increase the prices to offset that. They're not forced to and doordash isn't doing it for them. But, you know, they're still effectively "forced" to if their in-store prices don't have great margins to begin with...

2 comments

Correct it is advised by DD but eventually done by the merchant.
And they basically have no choice but to increase the price. Their margins are already razor thin.
Of course they do not. I still can’t believe that so called marketing that DD and Uber does commands a 30% rev share.
Most of that money goes towards the driver, last I checked in on unit economics. It costs quite a bit of money to pay a person to go to the restaurant, wait around, and then bring it to you — far more than the "delivery fee" that you see and that customers would pay.

Customers are cheap and they're (partly) to blame. My theory is that Amazon conditioned people to view delivery as a free commodity and pizza places who had delivery baked into their model cemented it.

So if Doordash listed a delivery fee that covered their true cost of delivery, customers would balk. So they instead have to find creative ways to get enough. Maybe it's changed and Doordash cracked the secret, but when I'd looked into it years ago these companies barely got by — many of them actually losing money.

With pizza delivery you typically (should) tip the driver $5+ ($10+ for larger orders) so idk if that really tracks specifically, but I do largely agree that part of is people being cheap for one reason or another.
I know people who drove for DD and they roughly earn minimum wage ~$15/hr. You can easily deliver 2 orders in an hour. So I don't really buy that either.
Ah my mistake then!