this post was submitted on 04 Jan 2024
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[โ€“] OneWomanCreamTeam 3 points 10 months ago (1 children)

How does their strike system work? How many does it take to get you banned from driving, and how long does it take for strikes to expire? Is the system even punlic knowledge?

I feel like that would all factor into how likely I am to report them.

[โ€“] [email protected] 4 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

How does their strike system work?

I haven't driven for them in a long time, but if I remember correctly it's a 3 strike system. I think in the case of OP's post though that would be an immediate driver account closure.

I think the expire thingy was either 100 or 500 properly delivered orders before they go away.

Shitty people abuse this system too as I had an order to a high security building and they wouldn't let me in the doors. I dropped the food off with security and that was that on my end. Customer then reported me saying she never got the order. Because I didn't go that extra mile and send her a text saying the food was there (something the app does anyways), I received a strike. (If you work in a high security building you know damn well to watch for your food, so in my opinion this was all on the customer.)

Is the system even punlic knowledge?

Kind of, sort of. doordash are a bunch of fuckheads and there is a HUGE disconnect between the driver and getting actual answers. I had an issue with one of their policies and attempted around 5 times to get a callback and clarification on the rules and never received a callback. Not once.

At this point, because I'm still doing this work. I will only work with GrubHub. They pay the drivers way more per order. I can call support and get actual answers. I can refuse to fill drinks because it's company policy the drivers are not to fill any part of the order. (It's dumb how many times I've had to deal with this. One 7/11 worker tried to make me fill an entire 8 drink order one day. I refuse to do their job while I'm just trying to do mine. GrubHub drivers are considered couriers, not customers like they are with Doordash.)

The best thing? Customer doesn't tip? They still pay well enough that I don't feel like I'm getting stiffed. Say I had an order to deliver some food 10 miles with no tip. Doordash non-tipped pay would be like $2.50-$3.00. GrubHub I'd get closer to $5. (For an example, an order I drove recently only had a $1 tip. Delivery distance was a little over 5 and a half miles. GrubHub pay was $4.67. doordash pay is typically a flat $2.50 up to 10 miles.)