For several years now, third-party restaurant delivery platforms have helped restaurant owners feed a growing appetite for easy online ordering and delivery.
Customers can now order everything from street tacos to scallop sashimi with a tap and have it delivered to their door — no waiting for a table, dealing with noisy conversations, or making public appearances required.
But while these platforms can make it easy to get into online delivery without building a complete delivery infrastructure, restaurant owners have started considering a different option: native technology platforms that offer online ordering and delivery using their own website.
A native platform is any technology you can implement on your website to provide functionality.
"As native platforms such as Bbot, Checkmate, and Relay have come on the market, it has opened up the opportunity to integrate seamlessly into restaurant websites," says Elizabeth Tilton, CEO of restaurant consultancy Oyster Sunday.
A native approach that drives customers to your website gives you more control over your customer experience. It also allows you to better understand shoppers' behaviors using website analytics while saving you hefty fees. But is it more cost-effective in the long run compared to selling on third-party platforms?
While both accomplish the same goal, in-house delivery and third-party delivery utilize very different paths to get there.
With in-house delivery services:
However, with third-party delivery services:
While third-party platforms can be faster to set up and less expensive to launch, restaurants may still be better off in the long run building out their in-house delivery operations. Here's why…
The cost to use third-party delivery services will vary depending on the platform you use, along with any extra features you add. Here are some of the fees you'll need to consider.
Keep in mind that these are only estimates. Fees vary greatly depending on the membership plan you choose, the city your restaurant is in, how many locations you have, and numerous other factors.
Scott Landers, co-founder of food delivery consulting agency Figure 8 Logistics, says that offering online food delivery services yourself is not only doable but potentially much more profitable.
"With third-party platforms, your profit margins are capped. If you sell more, you pay more, with no efficiency for a larger check size or the lifetime value of the customer relationship," he says. "With native delivery, you can fix your logistics costs so you can make more money as the check size increases. You also only have to spend money on advertising to acquire a customer one time. Every time they come back to order on their own, your acquisition cost is zero, increasing their lifetime value."
While your actual costs will depend on your sales volume, Landers recommends that restaurants estimate the following costs when budgeting for a native approach to online ordering and delivery:
Figure 8 and Oyster Sunday have created an open-source spreadsheet you can use to calculate your delivery profit margins based on your specific food, packaging, and delivery costs. Download a copy of the spreadsheet here.
Hungry to start taking online orders? You don't have to decide between selling on a marketplace or on your own website. Many restaurants use a hybrid approach.
"We advise restaurant operators to see third-party apps as a marketing expense, and to not rely on them as a lifeline for their business," Tilton says. "Restaurants can direct the customer to their native delivery services while also utilizing strategic third-party apps to ensure as many customers as possible have access to purchase."
To help you offer online checkout more effectively, here are a few tips to keep in mind:
PayPal for Business makes it easy for restaurants to accept payments for online orders while growing your business. Business can seamlessly:
Learn more about PayPal for Business.
Figure 8 Logistics was founded in 2019 as a food delivery consulting agency based in New York City. Figure 8 works with restaurants to build scalable and sustainable food delivery businesses and provides full-service food delivery consulting, including technology and logistics development, marketing and media strategy, operations training, and economic analysis. Sample clients include Zuul, Naked Farmer, Seamore's, and Mexicue.
Oyster Sunday was founded by Elizabeth Tilton in 2019 with a mission to reimagine a sustainable and supportive infrastructure for the food and beverage industry. They’ve already done the groundwork of establishing strategic partnerships with other vendors so independent restaurants and small food and beverage companies can easily leverage corporate services like branding, marketing, operations, systems, and HR.
In partnership with three expert business owners, the PayPal Bootcamp includes practical checklists and a short video loaded with tips to help take your business to the next level.
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