Times Colonist

Apps deliver headaches for restaurant­s, not just food

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

Ask chef Mollie J. Jacques about her experience with delivery apps such as Uber Eats, and she’ll recall the numerous times staff at the Toronto pizza place where she worked had no choice but to deliver orders themselves when drivers failed to show.

“At least once or twice a week, we would have to walk orders over to people, drive orders over to people,” she said. “We’ve had customers that have walked down themselves.”

Such anecdotes illustrate the bind that many restaurate­urs find themselves in. While food-delivery apps such as Foodora, Uber Eats and Skip the Dishes claim to help deliver access to more customers without investing in cars and drivers, they also create headaches for many operators, eating into already slim margins and leaving diners annoyed with the restaurant if a delivery goes awry.

“Every week, there’s a new company walking in, trying to get on this bandwagon,” Jacques said.

“To me, a lot of these apps have done so much damage, but there’s no backing out of it now. They all sound like a great idea walking in the door. But when you look at the bottom line, they aren’t.”

Her experience during those two-and-a-half years, where she’d spend more than an hour on a typical Friday or Saturday on the phone with Uber Eats customer service to rectify one problem or another, is “common,” she said.

While Uber Eats, Foodora, Skip The Dishes and Door Dash say they give restaurant­s access to more customers, none of them was able to provide data to back up the claim for the average restaurant partner.

DoorDash did not respond to a request for comment. Foodora said one of its highest volume partners — which it couldn’t name citing privacy reasons — increased its takeout business 90 per cent through the app.

Uber Eats is a growing company that is constantly learning how to improve the experience for customers, drivers and restaurant­s, and scaling up things like customer support to do so, said Dan Park, the service’s Canadian head.

Restaurant­s that do a good job working with drivers tend to be more successful with delivery, he said, highlighti­ng ones that offer a designated area for drivers to wait to avoid confusion.

Delivery apps are a popular topic among the 31,000 members of a food-industry focused Facebook group, where comments reflect a somewhat mixed experience, but overwhelmi­ngly point to high fees.

“It’s not profitable,” said page administra­tor Jacques, unless someone manages to make a product at an extremely low cost.

Uber Eats charges restaurant­s a one-time fee between $350 and $500, depending on how many extras they want, such as photograph­y, said Park. The app then charges a 30 per cent commission on each order, though some restaurant­s may pay a slightly different fee.

Arianna Dametto, a Skip The Dishes spokeswoma­n, and David Albert, Foodora Canada’s managing director, said in separate emails their companies do not charge a startup fee. They would not say what commission they charge restaurant­s, but indicated it varies.

Anecdotal informatio­n suggests most apps charge a commission of between 20 and 35 per cent. Some restaurant­s mark up prices on the apps to soften the blow.

House Special, a family-run Vietnamese restaurant in Vancouver, lists the same items and keeps portion sizes identical for dine-in and delivery, but tweaks prices, general manager Victoria Do said. The eatery has been present on Uber Eats, as well as DoorDash, since last winter, she said.

Uber Eats, however, discourage­s the practice, as the goal is for the consumer to have a great, consistent experience, Park said.

Industry insiders also complain about service hiccups, such as late drivers or ones who arrive without insulated bags to keep orders warm.

Jacques recalls watching some delivery drivers put pizza boxes vertically into bags or dashing in and grabbing the wrong order, including another customer’s doggy bag filled with leftovers.

At House Special, Do encounters a problem about once every two weeks. Others, including Jacques, say they’ve only had bad experience­s with certain apps.

The app companies said they compensate restaurant­s and customers to varying degrees for incidents such as if a driver fails to show up.

Despite the fees and potential problems, thousands of restaurant­s are present on the platforms, suggesting the apps are worthwhile.

House Special receives about $500 to $700 in Uber Eats delivery orders daily, said Do, and some customers have come to the restaurant to dine in after seeing it on the app. Park hears similar stories from many of the company’s restaurant partners.

The family restaurant also benefits from marketing opportunit­ies provided through the app to bring in more clientele, she said.

“We’ve grown a lot with our take-out business.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK, CP ?? Victoria Do, manager of House Special in Vancouver, says she encounters problems with delivery apps about once every two weeks, while other restaurant­s complain of more frequent issues.
DARRYL DYCK, CP Victoria Do, manager of House Special in Vancouver, says she encounters problems with delivery apps about once every two weeks, while other restaurant­s complain of more frequent issues.

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