56 points

i literally cannot think of a pricing model i want less for a restaurant i might conceivably patronize than this

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11 points

I don’t know. I can see it.

The Subway near me is often very quiet, but at particular times, predictably every week, they’re absolutely slammed. If they jacked all their prices by $1, then offered “off-hours discounts” of even $2, they’d probably see the same average price per sandwich, but shift customer demand to keep the restaurant more steady. They might even attract new customers who don’t come during rush times because they’re time sensitive, not price sensitive.

In other words, this could be a win-win-win for everybody:

Subway sees higher total revenue
Price-sensitive customers can shift their orders to lull hours and save a bit of money
Time-sensitive customers have lower wait times during lunch/dinner rush.

Subway (and Wendy’s, for that matter) already do this a bit with their coupons; I rarely go to Subway without coupons since I’m price sensitive. Switching from coupons to scheduled price fluctuations isn’t really a big change, and keeps people paying less with coupons from gumming up the dinner rush.

I think this could be good.

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41 points

I think this could be good.

on principle i will never trust any corporation to do good things unless compelled to by a higher power such as the state, and i certainly do not trust them to do good things when the corporate-speak being used to describe those things is “enhanced features like dynamic pricing and daypart offerings along with AI-enabled menu changes and suggestive selling.” reeks of grift

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-2 points

Sure, but nothing I wrote above depends on trust. This seems like it could be an Econ 101 example of the profit motive increasing the total utility in the system. Hence why I said this has the potential to be win-win-win.

I don’t trust companies to pursue anything other than the profit motive but sometimes that can be a good thing.

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24 points

You have to look at why are they busy at particular times though. Is it first thing? That’ll be breakfast on the way to work. Lunchtime? Speaks for itself. Early evening, that’ll be after work.

People can’t just randomly change their work hours to suit Subway/Wendy etc prices.

And, not everyone wants breakfast at 11 am and lunch at 3pm.

Any company upping their prices because it’s busy are just gouging customers.

How about they reduce prices when less customers are about?

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2 points
*

I’d wake up at 6am for a $2 McMuffin with bacon, maybe WcDonalds will do it (/s 😭)

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1 point

How about they reduce prices when less customers are about?

Isn’t that essentially what they said?

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12 points
*

Price-sensitive customers can shift their orders to lull hours and save a bit of money

No, that’s not part of this. They never said they’re dropping prices during off hours, just increasing them during busy ones. Price conscious people will be getting the same cost they are now or a price increase, not a discount.

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2 points

How about the customers that are both time- and price sensitive?

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35 points

Then I’m gonna implement Uber-style driving my ass away

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6 points

Lmao, it’s ridiculous how much this made me laugh! Thank you for that. :)

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21 points

If I ever see, ‘prices are higher at the moment due to increased demand’ on my Wendy’s app, I’ll be walking my happy ass to McDonald’s.

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12 points

As if they’d write something like that? I think it’s more likely they’ll just show a higher price as if it’s the normal base price and hope people don’t notice or care.

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6 points
*

If they were smart, they’d raise the prices to whatever their maximum surge pricing is and then show discounts on slower times. Then when they roll back the policy, they get a sneaky price increase because the higher prices were the “non-discoumted” prices

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1 point

I stg I will whip out the baconator spreadsheet

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21 points

I guess that’s one way to cut down on business during the rush hour

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7 points

It’s a way to maximize profits from a shifting demand curve:

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5 points
*

It makes logical sense! It’s just very… capitalism

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5 points

In an ideal world, it would only be a way to reduce demand so it meets a limited supply… but yeah, when supply can be increased, it’s kind of fleecing, since profit margins increase.

The flip side is that, in the low hours, the same fixed costs would need to be spread over a lower demand, increasing prices… but that would reduce demand even more, which would increase prices even more. So a “seasonal” (or “hourly”) business, needs to sell at a lower profit or even at a loss during low demand in order to stay open, then recoup that during high demand. If they don’t, then we get a “farmers vs Europe” situation.

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21 points

It could be my favorite restaurant and I would stop going and start advocating against them to friends and family if they did this.

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