Comment by bb611
6 years ago
It doesn't fully explain why they priced a $24 pizza at $16. I wouldn't be surprised if they're subsidizing purchases, but just skipping fees doesn't explain that.
6 years ago
It doesn't fully explain why they priced a $24 pizza at $16. I wouldn't be surprised if they're subsidizing purchases, but just skipping fees doesn't explain that.
Web-scraping is hard man, especially with mom-and-pop restaurant websites that are often exported straight from microsoft word or some ancient "platform" that got reconfigured 20 times over.
As article pointed out it picked up full-toppings pizza as plain cheese.
But they still paid full price to the restaurant! Someone in doordash knew the real price at some point then!
The full price was paid because a door dash card was used to pay for the order on pickup.
4 replies →
It could be so easy to game this.
Table Column A, menu items, lowest to highest in cost.
Table Column B, prices, highest to lowest in cost.
Naive scraper associates rows as menu item and cost.
You use CSS, etc., to rearrange things correctly. People looking at your site get info as intended, scrapers have problems, and it's only a dark pattern to them.
Surely it's cheaper to just pay someone to do data entry at that point.
Cheaper, less sexy, and doesn't justify the jobs of several dozen engineers, a few managers and a director.
If you're the director, which would you go for?
But that would that get VC funding? It's not their own money they are spending.
"My second thought: I knew Doordash scraped restaurant websites. After we discussed it more, it was clear that the way his menu was set up on his website, Doordash had mistakenly taken the price for a plain cheese pizza and applied it to a 'specialty' pizza with a bunch of toppings."
Lets them inflate the order count for the pitch.
They are taking a loss on every order, but they are hoping to make up for it with volume.
You can't make up for it in volume if each order makes a loss and you get no benefit from having more orders (they still pay each time the full price to the restaurant!)
(that's the joke)