Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter did it a bit. She found people with difficult deliveries often did not tip well. At $4 dollar a gallon gas the small deliveries made zero sense as she got an extremely extremely small percentage of cost of items (s) and folks tip off cost of item. She lose money on these type of deliveries. Plus $5 in app is not $5 dollar tip. It has a top of payroll taxes and fees withheld.
My daughter best tip was a very large delivery to outer Potomac she had to bring sister to help. On top of fee and tip in app, given it was like 95 degrees out, they let them use bathroom, two bottles cold water and a $50 dollar cash tip she was told to gas us and go get lunch with sister in village with cash. They got Chipotle and gas. It was like a $4 million dollar house and a $500 dollar order.
That’s how it is done
10% and bathroom access is not impressive when there are two delivery people, sorry. They should have tipped 100 minimum on a 500 order.
Agree. They should’ve tipped $100. This post is sad that you and your daughter both thought 10% was a great tip. It wasn’t. The outer Potomac people were very cheap.
Anonymous wrote:(I have not read the entire thread--just read a few posts.)
Seems like $5 might just cover the Door Dash driver's cost of gas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a nanny in school, who barely makes above minimum wage. My job is 1000000x harder than door dashing. I rarely use this service but when I do, no tip, because no one tips me for just doing my job. Ridiculous!
This is stupid. You work a job that doesn't depend on tips, and therefore make above minimum wage. They work a tipped job, and make below minimum wage. The fact that you find your job difficult doesn't mean other people don't deserve to be tipped. Study hard because you need some kind of logic foundation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter did it a bit. She found people with difficult deliveries often did not tip well. At $4 dollar a gallon gas the small deliveries made zero sense as she got an extremely extremely small percentage of cost of items (s) and folks tip off cost of item. She lose money on these type of deliveries. Plus $5 in app is not $5 dollar tip. It has a top of payroll taxes and fees withheld.
My daughter best tip was a very large delivery to outer Potomac she had to bring sister to help. On top of fee and tip in app, given it was like 95 degrees out, they let them use bathroom, two bottles cold water and a $50 dollar cash tip she was told to gas us and go get lunch with sister in village with cash. They got Chipotle and gas. It was like a $4 million dollar house and a $500 dollar order.
That’s how it is done
10% and bathroom access is not impressive when there are two delivery people, sorry. They should have tipped 100 minimum on a 500 order.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a nanny in school, who barely makes above minimum wage. My job is 1000000x harder than door dashing. I rarely use this service but when I do, no tip, because no one tips me for just doing my job. Ridiculous!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a nanny in school, who barely makes above minimum wage. My job is 1000000x harder than door dashing. I rarely use this service but when I do, no tip, because no one tips me for just doing my job. Ridiculous!
This is stupid. You work a job that doesn't depend on tips, and therefore make above minimum wage. They work a tipped job, and make below minimum wage. The fact that you find your job difficult doesn't mean other people don't deserve to be tipped. Study hard because you need some kind of logic foundation.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a nanny in school, who barely makes above minimum wage. My job is 1000000x harder than door dashing. I rarely use this service but when I do, no tip, because no one tips me for just doing my job. Ridiculous!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't think someone going to pick up your food and bring it to your house requires a tip?
No I don’t. I live in California so we pay $9-11 in fees on a $20 order, because we also pay for the drivers to have benefits. I’m not tipping you when I’m helping pay your health insurance. I don’t even get health insurance through work!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The delivery apps - and in fact all similar apps (Uber, Instacart) - are extraction capitalism at its finest. I was recently postpartum and begrudgingly ordered a couple of DD/Uber Eats meals. The fees charged are absolutely outrageous: one meal whose ticket price was $50 became an $80 dollar meal after the service fee and the delivery fee, plus tax and tip.
Just get your own food or get delivery from restaurants with their own drivers. Stop enriching tech bros at the expense of these drivers - who are not getting paid equitably by their employers - and customers!
That's become hard to find, unfortunately. DoorDash extorts the restaurants, too. they're awful all around.
https://get.popmenu.com/post/doordash-fees-for-restaurants-how-to-cut-costs-on-deliveries
Anonymous wrote:My daughter did it a bit. She found people with difficult deliveries often did not tip well. At $4 dollar a gallon gas the small deliveries made zero sense as she got an extremely extremely small percentage of cost of items (s) and folks tip off cost of item. She lose money on these type of deliveries. Plus $5 in app is not $5 dollar tip. It has a top of payroll taxes and fees withheld.
My daughter best tip was a very large delivery to outer Potomac she had to bring sister to help. On top of fee and tip in app, given it was like 95 degrees out, they let them use bathroom, two bottles cold water and a $50 dollar cash tip she was told to gas us and go get lunch with sister in village with cash. They got Chipotle and gas. It was like a $4 million dollar house and a $500 dollar order.
That’s how it is done
Anonymous wrote:You don't think someone going to pick up your food and bring it to your house requires a tip?