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Grubhub Was Getting 6,000 Orders A Minute During

    • 3250 posts
    June 5, 2022 10:58 PM EDT

    Grubhub Was Getting 6,000 Orders A Minute During Its Promo Today

    A delivery app marketing campaign offering a "free lunch" — aka a $15 promo code valid for three hours — sent customers and restaurant workers alike into a spiral on Tuesday as thousands of orders jammed the system and disgruntled New Yorkers tweeted through their hunger pains.To get more news about vouchers go ,vist www.vouchersgo.co.uk

    Grubhub's New York City campaign on May 17 touted the physical and mental benefits of eating lunch, but yielded dozens of complaints, canceled orders, and service workers telling BuzzFeed News they were "exhausted" trying to keep up.
    A worker named Lily in charge of packing orders at a Mexican restaurant in Harlem said since the restaurant's delivery driver couldn't keep up with demand, she ordered an Uber and hand-delivered 11 orders herself.

    Grubhub told BuzzFeed News that at times during the promotion, which ran from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., the app was averaging 6,000 orders per minute.

    It got overwhelming,” said Brandon Ching, who was working the counter at Greenberg’s Bagels, a popular sandwich spot in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. “We were short-staffed today so it really added extra stress to my day."

    And customers were frustrated at the delays. Ebenezer Ackon told BuzzFeed News he was in 3,630th place in line to talk to Grubhub's customer service when he gave up; after waiting more than an hour for food, he went to get something from across the street from his apartment.

    Blake, who didn't want to use his last name, said the small Brooklyn café he ordered from received 200 orders in five minutes as soon as the promo began, so they reluctantly had to cancel orders — including his.

    "It's been a complete disaster," Nathaniel, a Manhattan resident who asked that his last name not be used, told BuzzFeed News. He'd been thrilled that his order from a highly rated sushi restaurant went through, but after an hour of waiting, no response from the restaurant, and nothing from Grubhub, he canceled the order.

    "I hope they get blasted for this extremely poorly thought-out promo," he said.

    One of BuzzFeed News' own called Blue Ribbon Fried Chicken in Manhattan to check on her order after it was marked "closed" on the app, and an employee said they had done so to handle the 47 filled orders that hadn't been picked up.

    Of course, plenty of customers were thrilled with their "free lunch" — remember that giving a company your email address and phone number, both required to make an order, is a valuable thing for a company to have! — filling up previously empty Manhattan salad spots to pick up now much cheaper overpriced salads.