Paging William Shatner: Restaurants To Let You Name Your Own Price
from the seen-this-before dept
There have been several attempts at selling things using the "name your own price" model, including many failed experiments at Priceline.com alone. Now a company is hoping to try it again, this time for meals at restaurants (via Marginal Revolution). In its own words, the company is hoping customers go for a combination of a normal booking site and online auctions. It sounds like an amusing novelty, but it's doubtful that it'll really go very far. For one thing, if you have to specify the meal your bidding on, what happens when you get to the restaurant and you're in the mood for something else. And restaurants don't have particularly high margins, so whatever slight discount they'll be prepared to offer probably won't be worth it in light of the mental transaction costs of haggling for dinner. So, like similar schemes in the past, it probably won't accomplish much, save for a little bit of extra publicity for the participating restaurants. And it of course exhumes the corpse of yet another bubble-era business model.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Re:
Contributed by Joe
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Final Offer
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William Shatner?
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Re: William Shatner?
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Name your own price so long as...
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plane tickets are different
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not bad if gift cards
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Prices
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Re: Prices
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Violins and Accessories
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Re: Prices
Fucking idiot.
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Anonymous Coward
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Re: Anonymous Coward
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Sure - actual prices on items compared to a per-plate cost might seem low. However, that doesn't include restaurant operating overhead like staffing costs, liscence costs, food wastage (the remaining 50% of the head of lettuce put into salads that are not ordered but have to be made to meet a theoretical demand) and other associated operating costs.
Having managed kitchens myself (just the kitchen, not the whole restaurant) I know margins tend to be low - that's why the most money is made at very high scale restaurants and by chains who can absorb the minimal margins and get by on volume or over inflated prices.
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Sounds like a good idea for a new chain.
You can call it Eat'm and Beat'm.
(end of joke)
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Since when?
You really think that $10.95 pasta dish at Olive Garden uses more than 5 cents of pasta and 20 cents of sauce? How about that 1.95 all you can drink soda where each glass is 3-8 cents worth of soda?
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This might work for pizza.
I'd like to see a reverse-auction model, where the pizza comes out of the oven at ten bucks, and gets cheaper as it sits around. If you have several people waiting for a pizza, whoever's willing to pay the highest price wins, and the others wait for the next pie out of the oven.
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Cheapskates?
I'd also like to see the vid where a group of ten people go in, assuming the restaurant "automatically" adds gratuity for groups of eight or more, and have one guy argue down the percentage on his bill.... and then ask if they can put it all on separate checks, and oh by the way, please give us all receipts because we're writing this off as a business expense... and have the other nine people each try and haggle down their separate check before the restaurant staff start asking the cook where the sharp knives are kept.
Which... come to think of it, in all seriousness, might be the point. If a really upscale restaurant has a high percentage of fru-fru couples or business clients, and ESPECIALLY if they have a tight margin, they're going to have to -- covertly or not -- add a little "pad" to the top of their bill. Even if the "pad" isn't enough to always cover margin, it could well be that the restaurant's ratio of cheapskates is far lower than the restaurant's ratio of business people who don't care what the cost is because the company's picking up the tab (and that's just more $$ and more points for the employee on their card of choice), or the ratio of idiot guys looking to impress their dates, or just the ratio of people who are too timid to haggle or who just don't haggle well.
But the vids would still be funny, I think.
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