Prime members just got free food delivery, but Amazon could get 18% of Grubhub

Amazon now offers restaurant food delivery under a new Grubhub collaboration, wedged in with the site’s half-billion or so other products. And as yet another perk to Prime-paying customers, they’ll also pay zero for deliveries through a free Grubhub+ membership.

The move embeds Grubhub’s platform (an Amazon.com- and Amazon Shopping-friendly version of it, anyway) directly into the website and app, to create an ordering experience that Amazon vows is “identical” to using regular old Grubhub itself—minus, of course, the ability to reorder body soap and purchase a camping tent at the same time. This marks the first time Amazon has allowed app users to have any sort of third-party ordering access, and technically speaking, they don’t even need a Prime account. (Prime offers an opportunity to enjoy “pizza and Paw Patrol” or “falafel and Fallout.”) Grubhub will complete these orders, Amazon says, and its couriers will handle them like any other delivery.

Both companies got busy on Thursday plugging the clear benefit to consumers. “Grubhub+ is now free with Prime, and customers can place takeout orders directly on Amazon,” Amazon said, while GrubHub wrote: “Customers can now order Grubhub directly from Amazon.com.”

What is going mostly unmentioned, though, are the perks for Amazon. According to a third, less-read press release by JustEatTakeaway.com, the Dutch business that controls Grubhub, Earth’s biggest e-commerce site and owner of Whole Foods, streaming-platform Twitch, Ring doorbells, and almost (till antitrust regulators said no) Roomba robot vacuums, emerged with an ability to control up to 18% of the restaurant delivery platform by 2029.

The companies formed their proto-partnership in 2022, when Prime members may recall one free year of Grubhub+ suddenly materializing in their accounts. That deal also granted Grubhub equity to Amazon. It owned a 4% stake before this week’s deal. The new five-year agreement increased Amazon’s ownership stake to 7% today, with the possibility of reaching as much as 18% if Amazon can deliver a certain number of Grubhub orders through the collaboration within the agreement’s time span, according to Grubhub.

Asked whether increasing its stake potentially by four- to fivefold suggests more than a partnership is afoot here, Amazon simply told Fast Company, “The focus on our relationship with Grubhub is to bring Prime members a new ongoing offer.”

Regardless, nearly a fifth of Grubhub represents a healthy chunk of U.S. restaurant deliveries, even if Grubhub lags behind rivals like DoorDash and UberEats. (Whole Foods captures only about 2% of the U.S. grocery market, yet is still highly profitable, and the brand’s reach has expanded under Amazon.)

Grubhub CEO Howard Migdal boasted today in an interview with trade magazine Restaurant Business that their partnership ranks as “the most successful third-party benefit” that Prime accountholders have ever been offered. It’s unclear how he was measuring that exactly, but Amazon says that Prime members who make at least one Grubhub+ order per month will, by its seemingly generous math, save “an average of $300 per year in delivery fees and promotions.” (At one per month, that would equate to $25 worth of savings for each order.)

Midgal told Restaurant Business that the partnership’s greatest flaw is not enough Amazon users know it exists, that “awareness of the partnership versus the rest of the Amazon Prime universe is incredibly low.” The result is today’s new arrangement in which Grubhub has been permanently glommed onto Amazon.com and the Amazon app.

That also likely explains why Amazon created a way for all customers, Prime-paying or not, to link their Amazon and Grubhub accounts. Users are reassured that Grubhub can’t access anything except their basic contact info (name, email address). It seems Amazon gets “some information” related to users’ specific meal-ordering habits from this arrangement—although, no worries, the company says: The tech giant vigorously protects customer data and won’t use it for anything that customers haven’t consented to. Amazon notes, meanwhile, that free Grubhub+ memberships will remain active on “an ongoing basis,” so that setup will just continue auto-renewing for Prime members “every year thereafter as long as they remain with Prime.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91133436/prime-members-just-got-free-food-delivery-but-amazon-could-get-18-of-grubhub?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Created 8mo | May 31, 2024, 12:10:06 AM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

Amazon to pay nearly $4 million for allegedly taking drivers’ tips

Amazon has agreed to pay nearly $4 million to settle charges that the e-commerce company subsidized its labor costs by taking tips its&nbsp

Feb 7, 2025, 10:30:08 PM | Fast company - tech
‘It just didn’t go the way I planned’: Hawk Tuah girl breaks silence after crypto scandal

Following a cryptocurrency scandal in December 2024, Haliey Welch (aka Hawk Tuah girl) seemed to

Feb 7, 2025, 10:30:07 PM | Fast company - tech
Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses are having their Super Bowl moment

It’s game time for Meta’s wearables: The tech giant has bought two ad spots for its Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses during Sunday’s Super Bowl broadcast, including one that has Chris Hemsworth and Chri

Feb 7, 2025, 8:20:05 PM | Fast company - tech
‘A true victim of the Snapchat era’: Parents are resurfacing hilariously filtered baby photos from the 2010s

If you scroll through your old photos from the mid-2010s—the golden era of Snapchat—chances are a fai

Feb 7, 2025, 8:20:04 PM | Fast company - tech
OpenAI launches cross-country search to build data center sites for the Stargate project

OpenAI is scouring the U.S. for sites to build a network of huge data centers to power

Feb 7, 2025, 5:50:07 PM | Fast company - tech
‘It’s not only centered around video anymore’: Zoom’s CEO explains the video conference giant’s next act

Zoom made a name for itself during the pandemic, becoming synonymous with video conference calls. But the company

Feb 7, 2025, 1:20:06 PM | Fast company - tech
These groups are pushing for the NFL to end facial recognition

Ahead of Super Bowl Sunday, online privacy groups Fight for the Future and the Algorithmic Justice League are reiter

Feb 7, 2025, 1:20:04 PM | Fast company - tech