Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think its gotten hard for that gig as food prices have skyrocketed, PLUS the extra 10-15% markup per item that instacart adds...people just don't want to tip on top of that. Is it right? No. But it is what it is.
Did a $454 two cart order for Instacart on Wednesday and zero tip!
We have a local forum list of non tippers where we no to not take or decline the order.
There’s a catch though for people if they pay with WIC or EBT for example they cannot tip with that card on file. Cash is also rare for some to have on hand.
I'm sorry but people on welfare should not be wasting it on a luxury service - I would hope it is banned entirely
Or maybe they should have delivery fees waived.
No need to punish people because they are struggling financially.
You mean when a family of 4 gets $939/month in SNAP benefits?
Yeah. That is a very “thrifty” amount for a family of four.
No need to punish people who are struggling.
No it isn’t. We have a record labor shortage and people want $12,000/year in free food.
More ignorance. There are work requirements for SNAP.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry but if you need or want that tip for doing your job or whatever you were contracted to be doing, you are not entitled to it. It’s the same for every other salaried or contract position in the workforce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is 800k and I can’t justify paying for food delivery + tip. I’m amazed that so many can afford it.
Let me guess, the nanny, housekeeper who shops for you, and gardner are all ok expenses? Not like you shop for yourself or do much else.
Jeez. DP with a similar HHI and we absolutely do not have any of these things. Weekly cleaning service, occasional nanny, not even a landscaping service. I don’t know how you think we could possibly afford 3 full time professionals paid in post tax income.
I hope you don’t go around saying things like this in public. We make a quarter of what you do and consider ourselves extremely comfortable. Pity the poor $800k householder!![]()
DP. You do realize how expensive it is to have one full-time employee? With benefits and everything. Then x3?
Could you pay 3/4 of salary and benefits for an household employee?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a real job
Please enlighten us as to what is a “real” job?
A W2 job
So you better never read something a free lance reporter writes.
Also did you know many doctors are contract employees who get a 1099? I hope you have the guts to say that to their face.
Those doctors aren’t whining for “tips.”
Correct, but don’t forget to tip the mohel when he circumcises your son. He definitely works for tips!
Thank you, I’ll be here all weekend. Don’t forget to tip your servers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is 800k and I can’t justify paying for food delivery + tip. I’m amazed that so many can afford it.
Let me guess, the nanny, housekeeper who shops for you, and gardner are all ok expenses? Not like you shop for yourself or do much else.
Jeez. DP with a similar HHI and we absolutely do not have any of these things. Weekly cleaning service, occasional nanny, not even a landscaping service. I don’t know how you think we could possibly afford 3 full time professionals paid in post tax income.
I hope you don’t go around saying things like this in public. We make a quarter of what you do and consider ourselves extremely comfortable. Pity the poor $800k householder!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a real job
Please enlighten us as to what is a “real” job?
A W2 job
So you better never read something a free lance reporter writes.
Also did you know many doctors are contract employees who get a 1099? I hope you have the guts to say that to their face.
Those doctors aren’t whining for “tips.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is 800k and I can’t justify paying for food delivery + tip. I’m amazed that so many can afford it.
Let me guess, the nanny, housekeeper who shops for you, and gardner are all ok expenses? Not like you shop for yourself or do much else.
Jeez. DP with a similar HHI and we absolutely do not have any of these things. Weekly cleaning service, occasional nanny, not even a landscaping service. I don’t know how you think we could possibly afford 3 full time professionals paid in post tax income.
Anonymous wrote:Get another job if you need tips
Anonymous wrote:Why you should tip good delivery drivers/shoppers.
1. It's not a job. It's a contract. 30 minutes approx. The apps pay them a small fee for accessing your request. That money is not enough to pay them for the service you request.
If someone takes their personal vehicle, drives to the store , uses a pcard to get $150-500 worth of groceries , shops the items, bags them, loads them up , hauls them up stairs etc. the batch fee does not cover the extra work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think its gotten hard for that gig as food prices have skyrocketed, PLUS the extra 10-15% markup per item that instacart adds...people just don't want to tip on top of that. Is it right? No. But it is what it is.
Did a $454 two cart order for Instacart on Wednesday and zero tip!
We have a local forum list of non tippers where we no to not take or decline the order.
There’s a catch though for people if they pay with WIC or EBT for example they cannot tip with that card on file. Cash is also rare for some to have on hand.
I'm sorry but people on welfare should not be wasting it on a luxury service - I would hope it is banned entirely
Or maybe they should have delivery fees waived.
No need to punish people because they are struggling financially.
If you can’t afford groceries, you can’t afford grocery delivery. Sorry.
And sorry you can’t understand that elderly and disabled people exist, and the same reasons that prevent them from working also prevent them from grocery shopping. But let me guess- your pro-starvation and ableist philosophy stems from your “pro life” beliefs, right?
Anonymous wrote:Get another job if you need tips
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why you should tip good delivery drivers/shoppers.
1. It's not a job. It's a contract. 30 minutes approx. The apps pay them a small fee for accessing your request. That money is not enough to pay them for the service you request.
If someone takes their personal vehicle, drives to the store , uses a pcard to get $150-500 worth of groceries , shops the items, bags them, loads them up , hauls them up stairs etc. the batch fee does not cover the extra work.
Yes, but keep in mind Instacart shopping of a big grocery order and delivery of take out food are way different. Should not tip them the same. I use to tip $20-40 for a 200-300 dollar instacart. The instacart driver takes 20-30 minutes to shop. Take out deiver just pops in and pick up a bag from reataurant, and often can do two take out orders in one trip. I tip 5-10 for take out delivery based on how long they are driving. If driving 5 miles the tip is 5. If 10 miles the tip is 10-14.
Anonymous wrote:Why you should tip good delivery drivers/shoppers.
1. It's not a job. It's a contract. 30 minutes approx. The apps pay them a small fee for accessing your request. That money is not enough to pay them for the service you request.
If someone takes their personal vehicle, drives to the store , uses a pcard to get $150-500 worth of groceries , shops the items, bags them, loads them up , hauls them up stairs etc. the batch fee does not cover the extra work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is 800k and I can’t justify paying for food delivery + tip. I’m amazed that so many can afford it.
Let me guess, the nanny, housekeeper who shops for you, and gardner are all ok expenses? Not like you shop for yourself or do much else.