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| skylineonfire |
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 skylineonfire Trackday Trickster

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| Derivative |
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 Derivative World Chat Champion
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| Snorty |
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 Snorty World Chat Champion

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| st3v3 |
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 st3v3 Super Spammer

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| haroman666 |
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 haroman666 World Chat Champion

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| Derivative |
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 Derivative World Chat Champion
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| st3v3 |
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 st3v3 Super Spammer

Joined: 16 Oct 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 02:48 - 14 Feb 2013 Post subject: |
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Most places want you to do it, and pay the expenses for the privilage.
The only reason I don't do pizza delivery in the car which I'd be good at is because they expect me to put business use on my own insurance and pay for it, so I can work for them.
It's all well and good telling them where to GTFO, but they have numpty English and several foreign workers who are happy to pay for the privilage of working for them.  ____________________ Roger wrote: Women don't get damp for clingy puppies. Get some better happy pills, hit the gym & buy a medallion the size of a dinner plate. Job done |
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| Ingah |
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 Ingah World Chat Champion
Joined: 10 Apr 2009 Karma :   
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 Posted: 03:52 - 14 Feb 2013 Post subject: |
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| st3v3 wrote: | Most places want you to do it, and pay the expenses for the privilage.
The only reason I don't do pizza delivery in the car which I'd be good at is because they expect me to put business use on my own insurance and pay for it, so I can work for them.
It's all well and good telling them where to GTFO, but they have numpty English and several foreign workers who are happy to pay for the privilage of working for them.  |
It's pretty much this.
I did Pizza Hut scooter boy deliveries for a while. Got a little above minimum wage, and 20p a drop. But the 'bike' (goddamn terrible pug 50cc restricted scooter) and insurance were provided, along with petrol etc. They even 'provided' crappy gear and helmet. I used my own. It meant i turned up to work on my bike, in my gear, rode their bike around, and got paid. It was OK while i was at university and quite fun as i didn't have to worry about bouncing the scooter up kerbs etc, although a fairly risky job all considered (being on a timer is not going to encourage the safest, or most legal, riding behaviours. And chavs want to nick your obviously marked pizza bike). Car owner-drivers were on the same basic wage plus 80p a drop, and basic delivery insurance was provided for them. They of course paid for own petrol, tyres, etc. I asked about using my own bike for delivery, but they weren't having it. One upside to using their bike was that they didn't want to send you to the dodgiest areas of town at night as they didn't want the bike nicked
I went around a good number of the usual sort of shops looking at doing it myself (was thinking i could use my spare CG125), and found they were mostly wanting to pay £4 an hour + £1 a drop. Wouldnt've been surprised if they'd then tried to send me halfway round the earth for each drop to boot. One place even offered me work at £2.50 an hour, an all-time low! That would've been the sum total, no shop offered to pay extra for insurance etc. It seemed very much like they all wanted to pay the same or less than for the car drivers. So i went and got a job in a call centre.
TL;DR: I would go for Dominos/Pizza Hut. Edit: Papa John's, as below, also looks alright . Better off using a vehicle they provide. Little independents will rip you off for fast food delivery on your own bike.
Oh, and business use won't cover you for fast food delivery and it's quite hard to disguise the obvious smell of hot take away food... (could lead to an awkward police stop?) Fast food delivery insurance is, naturally, way more expensive. ____________________ -- Ingah
Last edited by Ingah on 04:19 - 14 Feb 2013; edited 1 time in total |
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| Vracktal |
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 Vracktal World Chat Champion

Joined: 04 Oct 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 04:10 - 14 Feb 2013 Post subject: |
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It is the noblest profession.
Worked pizza delivery for four years while at Uni, and I doubt they'll have you using your own bike for three reasons.
1.) They'd have to compensate you for fuel per-delivery which is a lot more hassle than just running their own bikes and telling you to top up when needed then pay out of your float.
2.) Their insurance will unlikely cover you on your own bike. I asked about using my own bike while working for Papa Johns, boss man told me there was no chance since the insurers were troublesome enough with the car deliverers and he didn't need another headache.
3.) They'd have to fit your bike with a pizza box. They're actually fairly expensive, and mounting kits generally only exist for the more common scooters and 125 bikes. It'd be a lot to invest in someone who could conceivably quit after a month, leaving them with no deliverer and a box that only fits your bike.
You'll probably be put on a Honda ANF125 if you're lucky or a cookie-cutter chinese bike if you're not. At my work, we had a fleet of 3 ANFs, each 'tied' to a biker, so only that biker would ride it. Means you get to know your bike well, but also means if you come unstuck and bend it, you're completely culpable. Also makes for some cool carpark photos.
https://i1080.photobucket.com/albums/j328/Vracktal/b1223e05.jpg
As for pay, expect minimum wage. Delivering in a car earns you between £0.70 to £1.50 per drop extra, but on a bike there's no fuel commission, you fill the bike up when it's empty, put the receipt in your float and hand it in when you cash up at the end of the day, it's added back to make up your total. There's good money to be made on tips though- On a good friday or saturday night I was making £15-£20 in tips from drunken people overgrateful to get their food and handing over amounts they probably regretted when they sobered up. Also, after a while you'll notice a pattern of regular tippers build up, cheers you up knowing you're riding to a house where the customer is gonner hand you £2.
Other stuff you should know-
Company usually provides the biker gear. Helmet, jacket, and waterproof trousers is the norm, all company logo'd. After a few days you'll learn which set is the best and start stashing it in the equipment cupboard for personal use.
Expect to work tills & phones while it's busy, or help clean the surfaces and sweep up when it gets late. Also expect to be asked to work past when your shift ends if it's super-busy, or be sent home early if it's super-quiet.
Buy a good A-Z. This is essential even if you know every road in the area. In the back of the pizza shop, there'll be a blown up map of the delivery area covered by that shop (usually a whole wall size), and sometimes a computer with a google maps connection. Once you get the ticket for the delivery you carry, it'll have a code corresponding to the grid on that map. Once you've found the house on the map, you basically have to commit the route to get there to memory, and even the best navigator can get it wrong. If you ever end up lost, at night, trying to remember the last few turns to get to an address you'll suddenly realise how useful A-Zs are. Also, it's likely during busy periods you'll have to do multiple drops- If there are two or three drops within a few miles of each other, you'll likely have to take all three in one go. The A-Z is priceless in situations like this.
Carry a torch. Every city has at least one dark, unlit road where all the houses have long drives and all have names instead of house numbers. These houses are a pain in the arse to deliver to at night, but having a decent torch you can shine at each house as you ride along makes it slightly more bearable.
Carry a mobile phone. The ticket for your delivery will also have the phone number the person who ordered the delivery used. Sometimes, you can't find the house you're supposed to deliver to, or the person who ordered it fell asleep in front of the TV or went upstairs and blared dubstep through their headphones so they can't hear you pounding on the door, or it's in a block of flats and the buzzer is broken. A mobile phone is invaluable in these situations.
When the weather is cold and rainy, doing drops sucks. But, the upside is a soaked, bedraggled but determined looking pizzaboy, battling valiantly to stay on his feet and breathless from walking up three flights of stairs to apartment 3C tugs at the heartstrings and earns beaucoup bucks. From my experience tips are usually double at the end of a day when the weather is harsh.
So yeah, that's my take of things. Having said it all, pizza delivery by bike is great fun- the bikes are slow but a hoot to ride, the pay's meh but tips can help make up for it, and in the summertime it's absolutely the mutts nuts since you're basically being paid to ride around all day. ____________________ 2007 BMW R1200R: On road
2009 BMW G650X Challenge: On road
1975 Norton Commando 850: Off road, awaiting recommissioning |
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| Snorty |
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 Snorty World Chat Champion

Joined: 13 Oct 2010 Karma :     
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 Posted: 04:29 - 14 Feb 2013 Post subject: |
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Ingah - The little Peugeot Ludix things are terribly slow aren't they!
The engine actually holds you back downhill. They're restricted by a variator washer, well one of the lads ( ) was friends with a motorbike shop, and took it there on one of his deliveries, where they whipped open the casings, and removed the washer.
45mph on a flat, and downhill speeds were only limited by the decline after that
As for tips, greatly depends on the area, where I worked everybody was very tight, you'd be lucky to get £9 on a pissing wet day when you're wet through to your socks. Sometimes you get people waiting for their penny change... ____________________ Current: Yamaha FZ1 '07 | GSXR 750 SRAD
Past: CB125TDC | TZR125 | GPZ500 | CBR600F3 | ZX9-R | GSXR1000 K4 |
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| Ingah |
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 Ingah World Chat Champion
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| Ja7 |
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 Ja7 Crazy Courier

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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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 Posted: 09:17 - 14 Feb 2013 Post subject: |
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I have it on good authority that it is not unusual to suppliment pizza delivery income by distributing other goods along with the pizzas, having as you do, an iron clad excuse for doing the rounds of the local council estate later on on a Friday night.
"Hi. Can I order a 10 inch extra smoky please.". ____________________ “Rule one: Always stick around for one more drink. That's when things happen. That's when you find out everything you want to know.”
I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles. |
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| Shinigami |
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 Shinigami World Chat Champion

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| Sable |
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 Sable World Chat Champion

Joined: 27 Jul 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 09:37 - 14 Feb 2013 Post subject: |
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Other than the no bike thing did the guy seem OK? If yes, put a rough pricing of how much it would cost you and your bike for say 10 mile and 50 mile. Hand it to him I say you would need help with the costs. Would take you 5 minutes with a calculator, might get you a job, and if the guys reasonable, might save someone else getting screwed later down the line  |
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| devojunior |
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 devojunior Brolly Dolly
Joined: 12 Sep 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:04 - 14 Feb 2013 Post subject: |
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| Snorty wrote: | Ingah - The little Peugeot Ludix things are terribly slow aren't they!
The engine actually holds you back downhill. They're restricted by a variator washer, well one of the lads (  ) was friends with a motorbike shop, and took it there on one of his deliveries, where they whipped open the casings, and removed the washer.
45mph on a flat, and downhill speeds were only limited by the decline after that
As for tips, greatly depends on the area, where I worked everybody was very tight, you'd be lucky to get £9 on a pissing wet day when you're wet through to your socks. Sometimes you get people waiting for their penny change... |
i new this was coming lol |
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| Snorty |
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 Snorty World Chat Champion

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| st3v3 |
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 st3v3 Super Spammer

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| Ingah |
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 Ingah World Chat Champion
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| st3v3 |
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 st3v3 Super Spammer

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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 13 years, 5 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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