Agreed. But until we actually hold these giant companies accountable, please don't take it out on the worker by stiffing them. If you don't want to pay the fees, don't use that service, and tell them that.
I don't think $7 is a particularly hefty fee. If it's a grocery store they typically aren't paying employees to do shop for you, it's an extra service for an extra charge. I think I pay $10 per order from my local grocery.
Walmart's not going to be a good model, there, as while the chance of abuse being the cause might not be 100%, it hangs out near enough 100 to know more than a few intimate things about it.
If you're asking someone to collect your groceries, maybe pay them to do so. Tips are broken as a concept, so whatever there.
typically aren’t paying employees to do shop for you
The employees are paid hourly to be at work and do what they're told, basically. It's not like asking an employee to pick groceries for an order costs the company extra. The employee is already being paid to be there whether or not they pick your order.
The fee is being charged because they know you will pay it, not because it's an extra cost.
i don't know about this place but i know with a lot of other delivery options the "fee" does not go to the employees, it's just extra money because they can
I was generous during covid to those actually working, 30% usually. Now nobody does a damn thing but have their hand out... Companies need to step us, not us.
That being said I'm not physically unable or too lazy to go to the grocery store.
Out of curiosity, does Amazon charge a handling fee or ask you to tip the picker? Walmart? Sporting good stores? Pet food stores? Absolutely not.
There are a dozen grocery stores in my area, and the most that any of them charge for a "handling fee" is $1. None ask for tips, and actually ask not to tip.
I'm not arguing about shipping costs. But a tip on top of a handling fee is mildly infuriating.
It would be way more convenient for me to walk to the store and buy this item, but these guys are a few cities over. I'm happy to pay for shipping, but everything else is a cash grab.
Amazon is set up as a business to do the picking. That cost is factored in. Walmart has the same market space as Amazon, so not much room to charge more and still be competitive. I can't comment on the sporting goods store unless you mean buying online from one, in which case it's still the same situation: a warehouse designed to pick and ship as the business model. Saves them from shipping and storing in the store. But a grocery store? They're not set up for this thing. And being they're a few cities over, it's not incredibly unreasonable to have to pay for someone to pick it, consume a box, consume filler material, consume tape, print a label, and then mail it. If they deliver themselves, it wouldn't be so complicated to pack it, but it'd probably be the same cost for the truck and driver. If the law hasn't specified their job can be below minimum wage and covered by tips (serving), then they're getting minimum at the minimum. Yes, minimum is trash where I am, but nothing says that tipping is required. People were tip-happy when this program was probably set up in 2020
This is one reason I dislike buying online. Never know when you're gonna be screwed by stuff like this.
I had to buy lab access codes online for a couple classes and with an applied 25% discount code on one item I still ended up paying, tax included, pretty much the same price as before the code was entered (without tax). Online is convenient when I'm buying things like old CDs or old games or something along those lines, but I hate all the sneaky shit a lot of places will try to pull on you.