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Can a food delivery rider deliver 50 orders a day?

I used to deliver food in Meituan. You said you deliver 50 orders a day. It depends on the situation: If the system dispatches orders to you mainly during the noon peak period and the evening peak period, then these 50 orders

It will be very hurried, tiring, and even a little rushed and impatient to deliver it.

If you just simply deliver the prepared meal to the customer, this is nothing to the experienced rider. However, there are many other factors involved, such as the merchant's slow delivery of meals and the system's large number of orders.

Factors such as the distance and difficulty in finding the delivery location.

For novices, any problem with these factors will cause a timeout, but for experienced riders, except for the slow delivery of meals by the merchant, other factors are nothing to them.

If the system dispatches orders evenly during your shift, then it will be relatively easy to deliver these 50 orders.

Because the site I stayed at before, the three shifts, the online time was about 10-11 hours. Calculated, it was about 5 orders per hour. The system will not dispatch orders to you one by one, but only a few orders.

It is relatively easy to give away some items together.

50 orders a day is not to say that the labor intensity is high. I can only say whether you can accept this kind of work mode. If you run food delivery, you will do it just because you want to make more orders, otherwise you will risk your life to deliver food.

The more work you do, the more you will earn, the more orders you place, the more money you will earn!

And when you run 50 singles every day, you won’t feel tired at all. On the contrary, you hope to run more singles.

Or if you only have 20 or 30 orders a day, you won’t be able to adapt.

Therefore, since I run a takeout business, I wish I could have 50 orders a day. It doesn’t matter whether it is very labor-intensive. Once I get used to it, 50 orders are just a small case!

I hope that laymen who have never experienced it personally will not fool you. I advise you to be kind!

I have been joining Meituan Crowdsourcing for half a year. I basically run for three or four hours every day after work. Even if I am in good condition, my efficiency is very high and the average distance I run is very short. If I divide it into one hour, I can deliver 5 orders completely and safely.

Thank God it didn’t time out!

So, what is the actual situation?

This is the data I just took a screenshot of. After 12 o'clock in the evening, these data will reset to zero.

This is a normal performance. Some time ago, a Top 1 master could run 100 orders a day at his peak!

And behind these nearly 100 orders, they have to spend at least ten hours or more a day to achieve this goal!

Based on an average order of RMB 5, the top earner earns close to RMB 500 per day (this does not include factors such as overtime, meal damage, malicious cancellations by customers, malicious deductions from the platform, etc.), and can earn between RMB 10,000 and RMB 15,000 a month.

But in fact, it is not easy to achieve one month out of 15,000 years!

Delivering food seems very free and fun to outsiders and novices. Can you try it if you insist on it for a month, three months, or half a year?

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Finally, I advise everyone to have a heart of awe, be kind to others, be kind to all walks of life, love life, work hard, and enrich every day!

The question you asked cannot be given an accurate answer from an objective perspective.

Because: 1. Everyone has a different definition of labor intensity. Work that others may not think is tiring may seem tiring to you, or the result may be the opposite.

2. Depending on the city, the rider's transportation and delivery area are affected, and the labor intensity corresponding to the same order quantity is also different.

3. Food delivery riders are now divided into many types of jobs, and different types of work have different intensity.

Therefore, I can only answer your questions based on my own experience and knowledge, and I hope it will be helpful to you.

Whether it is easy to run fifty orders depends on the situation.

Take my takeout delivery business in Beijing as an example. I run from 6 a.m. to get off work at 10 p.m. On a good day, I order more than 50 orders. It’s not tiring for me, but some people are extremely tired.

However, our team also has people who run sixty or seventy orders. For them, if they only run fifty orders, it may be very easy and they can get off work early at night.

In addition, for many riders who run crowdsourcing, fifty orders a day is just the basics for them. The more advanced ones among them can run more than a hundred orders a day. For these people, fifty orders should be very easy.

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Secondly, the areas I deliver include residential communities and office buildings. Many communities require walking to enter, and many office buildings require walking to climb more than ten or even twenty floors during peak periods.

Because the elevator cannot wait at all, if you wait for the remaining orders in the elevator, you will face a timeout.

In this case, fifty orders a day will be very tiring if you are unlucky.

However, some delivery areas are very easy. The places for picking up and delivering food are relatively concentrated, and there is no need to climb stairs. The car can go downstairs in the community. In this case, it will not be too tiring to order 80 orders a day.