How to Handle Internet Indecision

How to Handle Internet Indecision

There are 6,245 restaurants on Seamless in New York City. Sometimes deciding between a roast beef sandwich and a pepperoni pizza is an impossible choice. But this is not an isolated dilemma—the question of what to watch, what to eat, and what to click is indicative of an issue that plagues the whole internet.

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Seamless Takes a Cut Almost Equal To the Tip On Every Order

Seamless Takes a Cut Almost Equal To the Tip On Every Order

Great and powerful provider of food delivery Seamless and GrubHub take almost a 14 percent cut on every order, according to data culled by Quartz from the company’s IPO prospectus. That means in some cases, Seamless is eating almost all the gratuity, if you give the traditional 15 – 20 percent.

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Starting today, you’ll be able to order from GrubHub and Seamless restaurants directly from Foursqua

Starting today, you’ll be able to order from GrubHub and Seamless restaurants directly from Foursquare. In addition to the usual info you see when you look up a restaurant, you’ll also see the option to order from participating joints. Which is kind of weird because Foursquare is about going places and delivery is about sitting on your butt. Hurray for lazy.

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You can now order food for delivery and pickup directly through Yelp.

You can now order food for delivery and pickup directly through Yelp. There’s no threat to your pal Seamless just yet—Yelp’s service is only available at a few places in New York and San Francisco for now. But it will roll out to other cities in the next few months.

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GrubHub, Seamless Merge To Take Over Take-Out Food Delivery

GrubHub and Seamless are announcing they are merging to take on its rivals.

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Seamless and GrubHub are merging to form a giant food delivery service

Seamless and GrubHub are merging to form a giant food delivery service

Seamless and GrubHub, two of the biggest food delivery services in the US, have just announced they’ll be merging into a combined company, with the name of the new operation to be decided at a later date. (SeamHub? Grubless?) Unlike some other transactions we cover around here, this does seem to be a merger in the truest sense of the word, with GrubHub founder Matt Maloney stepping up to the role of chief executive officer and Seamless CEO Jonathan Zabusky staying on as president. Though we don’t yet know what the new service will be called, the companies are already saying it will serve 500-plus US cities, with more than 20,000 restaurants taking orders. Also, as hinted in that press release below, the merger will give the new mega-company more financial flexibility when it comes to further growth opportunities. Next up: Delivery.com?

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Via: The Next Web

Flu Pandemic Causes Soup Delivery Explosion

In case you hadn’t heard, pretty much everyone in America has the Flu right now. It’s bad for economic productivity—unless you work in the food delivery business, in which case, the listless and miserable are a boon for business. The online food ordering service Seamless reports huge month-over-month increases in some classic sick people cuisine. More »