Top Dasher and Premier or Pro don’t give me enough in return to make it worth the lower earnings. Instead, they give you points for every order you accept. With all of these other requirements, you really aren’t giving up much.I’m starting an experiment.

Now I haven’t dug into how the ASU online tuition thing works but I have to say I’m skeptical. Let’s put it another way: Being selective is earning me 50% more.Here’s the deal: I can afford to not be top Dasher where I am. People made it or didn’t make it. Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis.Sonnenfeld: I think Legere could take WeWork job, he likes 'a crazy challenge'The clothing rental start-up Rent the Runway is closing all of its stores for goodMichael Rubin's Fanatics now valued at $6.2 billion after latest Series E funding round A separate Got a confidential news tip? UPDATE, June 19, 2020: DoorDash has secured $400 million in a new round of funding led by Durable Capital Partners, with Fidelity and existing investor T. Rowe Price joining, according to Axios.The food delivery company is now worth $16 billion. I think acceptance rates across the board have tanked under the new model, so Doordash has to figure out another way to get people to take orders.I don’t think there’s any coincidence in the fact that Doordash has rolled out their Top Dasher program around the same time as they introduced their pay model.

You have to be a little more thoughtful about what orders you accept, however I think that when you accept a delivery you are making a commitment.

In fact, I have to wonder if they aren’t more likely to offer a lower dollar delivery to a Top Dasher just because they know they’ll be more likely to accept it. I don’t see any problem with keeping your schedule or only dropping so many blocks on Grubhub. If the pay is significantly lower though, it no longer is worth doing.Remember this: You’re not making what you think here folks.

You can evaluate them as part of the evaluation of an individual delivery.I will tell you that I don’t trust Grubhub or Postmates enough to ever make a decision based on what they are dangling. I really have no problem with that. This resulted in DoorDash's valuation climbing to roughly $7.1 billion. Does that offset the difference of what you earn with Uber Eats and anyone else?This is based on my market and my way of doing things, so it’s not how I think YOU should necessarily see them. Representatives from DoorDash weren't immediately available for comment.DoorDash is among SoftBank's big bets out of its Vision Fund and one the Japanese conglomerate needs to pay off handsomely after the recent disaster at WeWork, which SoftBank led a $535 million investment in DoorDash in The funding round comes as DoorDash is said to be eyeing an initial public offering. While Doordash offers “more deliveries” I did not notice any difference as a Top Dasher. You could do as few as 17 deliveries in a month and get most of the perks. But when it crosses into penalizing you for not taking more offers, then they’ve crossed a line.At this point, it’s kind of hard to compare the Uber Eats pro program. I pride myself on being quick but there are so many times here that I’m getting the order late or the delivery window is way too tight to make it on time. But if I have to do 95% to get access, my earnings per hour go way down.So now I have to ask myself some things. There’s something really there.But is it worth it? For me, if it’s a question between having access to blocks and accepting everything, I’m either going to shift to something else or quit driving. If not, run away.With less analysis I came to same conclusion with Doordash. Too often, the delivery fee isn’t enough on its own to make a delivery worthwhile, so if the customer doesn’t tip well, how do these companies get the food delivered?These companies aren’t going to go the employee route unless forced to do so.

People wonder what it will take to make it the next month. Ultimately the question should be, is it […] A dollar per delivery? So I don’t actually care about this stat.You’ve made clear we shouldn’t care about acceptance ratings, we’re not obligated to do so; we should be concerned by accepting orders that maximize our earning potential.That leaves completing orders. While they cannot require you to accept offers, they can offer incentives or rewards for higher acceptance rates. The qualifications for each market vary.

These are not hard to obtain. On the one side, acceptance rate doesn’t matter. Everything else is a virtual carrot on a stick. Postmates likes to offer up a bonus for completing so many deliveries in a time frame but too often the offers dry up as soon as you are close to the goal.A quick note about Boosts on Uber Eats. The exception would be during extremely busy periods. Cash back? 3% of that is $9.

If everything goes right — food arrives as ordered, hot, on time and is handed to me at the specified location — I’m going to give a 3.0 rating. For Premier, you need to acccept 95% of your offers, drop less than 10% of the blocks you scheduled, and show up for every block that you scheduled but didn’t drop (100% attendance).