Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least 10%. Otherwise, go pick up your own groceries.
OP here. If everyone tipped 10%, these drivers would be making approximately $42 per hour by my calculations. You don’t think that seems a bit high?
Most people don't have $200-300 orders. My last order was $100 and I tipped $5.
This is the OP. I calculated that using the total amount of groceries they are delivering on a shift, which is $2500 (across 17 deliveries, so $147 is the typical delivery total). So I'm taking that into account in my calculations. $2500 x 10% = $250. Divide by 9 hours (length of shift) and that's $28. Add on the $14 base pay, that's $42 per hour.
Jesus, you're cheap and petty and asking people to validate both. You extrapolated out someone's pay for a job you've never done to make sure that it's within what you consider to be an acceptable range for that job? Petty. Tipping 3-5% is cheap. If you aren't willing to tip appropriately, go to the store and get your own food.
I don't miss the grocery store and understand that having someone pick my items, bag them, and drop them at my door cost money, hence markup, service fees, and tipping. Hilarious that DCUM, famous for it's HHI bragfests is cheaping out and policing the wages of people who didn't sit on their asses in their home office all pandemic. Classic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least 10%. Otherwise, go pick up your own groceries.
OP here. If everyone tipped 10%, these drivers would be making approximately $42 per hour by my calculations. You don’t think that seems a bit high?
Most people don't have $200-300 orders. My last order was $100 and I tipped $5.
This is the OP. I calculated that using the total amount of groceries they are delivering on a shift, which is $2500 (across 17 deliveries, so $147 is the typical delivery total). So I'm taking that into account in my calculations. $2500 x 10% = $250. Divide by 9 hours (length of shift) and that's $28. Add on the $14 base pay, that's $42 per hour.
Anonymous wrote:Well now we can finally confirm the rumor that rich people are cheap AF
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have now spent more time and energy AND MONEY, based on your hourly rate, on rationalizing lower tips than it would cost you to just give the higher tip.
Not true. This is a one-time analysis for repeated future use. If OP continues to purchase from Amazon/WF, then the higher tips add up significantly.
Anonymous wrote:You have now spent more time and energy AND MONEY, based on your hourly rate, on rationalizing lower tips than it would cost you to just give the higher tip.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least 10%. Otherwise, go pick up your own groceries.
OP here. If everyone tipped 10%, these drivers would be making approximately $42 per hour by my calculations. You don’t think that seems a bit high?
Most people don't have $200-300 orders. My last order was $100 and I tipped $5.
This is the OP. I calculated that using the total amount of groceries they are delivering on a shift, which is $2500 (across 17 deliveries, so $147 is the typical delivery total). So I'm taking that into account in my calculations. $2500 x 10% = $250. Divide by 9 hours (length of shift) and that's $28. Add on the $14 base pay, that's $42 per hour.
Where do you get they do $17 deliveries a day?
OP here. I found this “day in the life of” article. Not a representative sample, but it’s the best I could find.
https://www.grocerydive.com/news/grocery--peeking-inside-the-pod-a-deep-look-inside-peapods-grocery-delivery-business/533816/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon suggests $10 tip per delivery for our large orders. Money only goes to the driver - not the shopper.
There is no way to tip the shopper in that case?
For Amazon Fresh they're not going into Wegmans or wherever and picking things off the shelves. They're not shoppers, they're warehouse workers.