Pandemic saviors, food delivery apps now under fire
Last updated on: 10 October,2021 08:26 am
A DoorDash delivery person
NEW YORK (AFP) - Meal delivery services became essential during the pandemic, when millions of Americans were under lockdown and restaurants were shut to visitors.
But these days the platforms are increasingly finding themselves under fire, with politicians seeking to regulate the industry and restaurateurs accusing the likes of DoorDash, Grubhub and Uber Eats of freeloading. And they are looking for ways to do without them.
In just the first nine months of this year, DoorDash has likely filled over 1 billion orders, most of them in the US, where the company is the market leader.
But Mathieu Palombino, founder of the New York-based pizza chain Motorino, calls the boost provided by delivery apps a "big illusion" because more orders don t bring bigger profits to restaurants.
"When you receive thirty or forty orders a day, you are happy. But the problem is that it does not translate into profits," Palombino told AFP.
Food delivery services can charge restaurants fees of up to 30 percent of the bill for a meal, according to their web sites.
To address that problem, in August the New York city council passed a law, capping third-party delivery fees at 15 percent.
"Small businesses should not be pressured into accepting these fees in order to remain viable and competitive," said New York City Councilman Francisco Moya, who initiated the bill. A similar law was passed in San Francisco in June.
Food delivery giants have challenged the laws in courts, and some analysts think they have a point.
"We believe DoorDash will have a strong legal case against the permanent fee caps," Bank of America said in a research note last month.
DoorDash, Grubhub and Uber Eats argue that the cap is unconstitutional and that restaurants are free to negotiate their commissions with delivery platforms.
The delivery giants also say they have made huge investments during the pandemic that led millions of customers who had never ordered meals online to get started.
And DoorDash says that restaurants that used its platform during the pandemic had a survival rate eight times higher than the industry average. The company also says that even before the laws were passed it already offered a 15% fee formula.
Put Palombino, the pizza chain founder, is unconvinced.
"The problem is that they have become so established that there no longer is a way back," he said. "If you re not on Seamless (one of the most popular delivery services in New York), you no longer exist."
As for the 15 percent commission, Palombino said that a successful restaurant can "only hope" for a profit margin of 15 or 20 percent.
"So at the end of the day, they take it all.
The only real solution
In court, the food delivery platforms have argued that the cap will trigger higher fees for consumers, who have been relatively spared for now.
Collin Wallace, managing director of the marketing firm ZeroStorefront and former head of innovation at Grubhub, says that so far it s the restaurants who have had to bend.
"The only way to get this resolved is going to be by the technology platforms, using the same engineering and innovation they used to get their companies to this point," Wallace said.
Some businesses are already trying to get around the all-powerful delivery apps by creating their own platforms.
One such start-up, ChowNow, helps restaurants launch their own order-taking applications, so as not to have to pay any commissions at all.
Another company, LoCo, creates delivery cooperatives owned by restaurants, where they get to choose their own commissions, often half of what delivery giants charge, said LoCo founder Jon Sewell.
Sewell, himself an owner of a restaurant in Iowa, added that this arrangement also allows restaurants to keep their clients data to themselves.
LoCo has launched franchises in Virginia, Nevada, and Nebraska and is looking to expand further.
But Sewell admits that the concept is not easy to sell.
"It s difficult to get the people convinced that they need to start to work as a collective."
But, Sewell added, "to me, that s the only real solution."