I'd like to hear more about the liabilities of processing cashless transactions with Mobile Order and Pay on the McD app... it's deploying nationwide at a rapid clip, and when I asked the region who was responsible for a fraudulent transaction on the app, they said that was a tricky subject and they would get back to me. No word yet!
We should partner with DiningLogistics, they own RestaurantsNearMe.com, as well as DeliveryNearMe.com, and ironically, they seem to be focused on partnering with transportation providers. According to their site, they don’t charge restaurants anything to be listed or participate on RestaurantsNearMe.com, instead they focus on making money from transportation providers. I’ve seen them working with a local taxi company in Philly, but not with Uber or Lyft yet. No 15% fee !!!!!!
7 comments:
Call me old fashioned but I remember the days when a company had to be financially viable to be a McDonald's vendor.
I'd like to hear more about the liabilities of processing cashless transactions with Mobile Order and Pay on the McD app... it's deploying nationwide at a rapid clip, and when I asked the region who was responsible for a fraudulent transaction on the app, they said that was a tricky subject and they would get back to me. No word yet!
I think we know who will take the hit for any problems
We are plunging ahead recklessly, change for the sake of change.
We should partner with DiningLogistics, they own RestaurantsNearMe.com, as well as DeliveryNearMe.com, and ironically, they seem to be focused on partnering with transportation providers. According to their site, they don’t charge restaurants anything to be listed or participate on RestaurantsNearMe.com, instead they focus on making money from transportation providers. I’ve seen them working with a local taxi company in Philly, but not with Uber or Lyft yet. No 15% fee !!!!!!
Need to look at cash flow. You can be making a lot of money, yet still show a net paper loss with all the tax loopholes available.
The real question is how much of the 15% (or whatever the final number is) gets kicked back to Oak Brook and the O.B. execs who made this deal.
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