If someone shows up in a red t-shirt with DoorDash on it to shop for and deliver groceries to someone, will Kroger management approach and ask them to leave?
Just curious if that's someone Kroger wants to eventually do. What are the general public's rights to start their own business of shopping on behalf of someone else and delivering the goods to a customer, instead of the customer ordering stuff for pickup with Kroger's pick-list setup?
InstaCart and Shipt shop for customers at Kroger locations frequently. Shipt shoppers specifically wear a green shirt that says Shipt on it. Granted, InstaCart has partnered with Kroger and can be used in place of ClickList via the websit/app if a customer wants home delivery service, but even before that partnership, InstaCart shoppers would still come in and shop for customers.
As long as the groceries are being paid for, Kroger doesn't care if it's the customers themselves coming in and shopping or someone that's being paid by the customers to come in and shop for them. Kroger gets the money either way.
I swear Instacart shoppers are more snooty than an actually shopper because they're too stuck up and think they know how to play grocery better than the employee doing their damn ****en job. I've had most of them treat us like crap half the time and I'm getting sick of it.
I've gotten **** from them from merely for asking Instacarters for their shopper's card. And then there's all the previous nonsense about requiring online orders starting with scanning the phone, and online orders requiring management overrides (fixed now). And Instacarters love to bag their own orders refusing all help (including the cashier) and trashing CCG's while doing so.
Shipt shoppers are ****ing cool by comparison.
I honestly don't know if I've ever seen a DoorDash employee. Personally, I'm in favor of management asking any (and every) customer to leave since "Sharing Success" has been discontinued in favor of executive bonuses and mass firings.