When the coronavirus pandemic hit,hd granny sex video many Americans went from eating at restaurants to ordering meals on their phones. A new survey reveals which delivery app they have been using.
Toast, whose software helps restaurants do everything from take orders to print bills, surveyed 707 U.S. adults in early June. During the previous month, all of them had either ordered delivery or takeout, or eaten at a restaurant.
Of those surveyed, only 14 percent said they had not ordered food online. Not that picking up the phone is completely outdated. It also found that 52 percent of customers had called a restaurant to make an order.
Nearly half (46 percent) of those using third-party delivery apps used DoorDash (including DoorDash-owned Caviar). The next most popular app was Uber Eats at 34 percent, followed by Grubhub at 33 percent. But if you look at all Grubhub-owned apps (Seamless, Eat24 and LevelUp) it moves into second place with 45 percent.
Sixty-four percent of respondents said they used a delivery app at some point over the month. Thirty-six percent said they used them a few times. Only 4 percent said they used them multiple times a day.
"Personal behavior has changed so dramatically" since the pandemic began, said Kelly Esten, the VP of marketing at Toast.
For restaurants, she said owners and managers "have had to pivot to serving guests in different ways." She noted almost half of Toast restaurant-partners didn't have an online delivery presence before the outbreak.
Now delivery and takeout are the main ways customers can support and eat at their local businesses. Toast's data shows people stopped eating at restaurants when the pandemic hit. Not surprisingly, that's exactly when takeout and delivery took off.
The apps have been a lifeline for restaurants, but they're not without drawbacks. They take huge delivery fees from restaurants, usually about 25 percent of orders.
SEE ALSO: Restaurants face high fees from delivery apps. Uber buying Postmates will make it worse.Delivery apps were being used more often and gaining users before COVID-19. That shouldn't stop anytime soon.
"Some of this behavior will have to stay with us forever," Esten predicted. "It's not going to flip right back."
Topics COVID-19
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for April 1, 2025
The internet is savaging the rhetoric of 'Australian values,' whatever those are
This coding startup trains autistic people to take on the tech industry
Best tablet deal: Save $45 on Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet
Rihanna's new jelly slides look like those cheap sandals found all over Asia
Facebook: Real AR glasses are at least 5 years away
More Star Wars Land details emerge and they have us freaking out
The cicadas aren't invading the U.S.
'Pretty Little Liars' boss teases 'brutal' Season 7 endgame
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 9, 2025
Ikea is 'deeply flattered' by this $2,145 high fashion homage to their humble tote
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。