Instacart Shoppers are Organizing a Nationwide Protest
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Instacart shoppers are organizing a nationwide protest - TechCrunch
Instacart has long been at odds with its shoppers - the people who go to the grocery store on behalf of customers. From November 3-5, thousands of Instacart shoppers plan to protest with three demands. They want Instacart to change the default tip amount to at least 10%, ditch the service fee and commit to always giving 100% of the tip to the shopper.
"We did not arrive at the 10% figure arbitrarily, rather this is what the default tip amount was back when I and many others started working for Instacart," Vanessa Bain, an Instacart shopper wrote on Medium this week. "We are simply demanding the restoration of what was originally promised."
[...] Back in 2016, Instacart removed the option to tip in favor of guaranteeing its workers higher delivery commissions. About a month later, following pressure from its workers, the company reintroduced tipping. Then, in April 2018, Instacart began suggesting a 5% default tip and reduced its service fee from a 10% waivable fee to a 5% fixed fee.
"We take the feedback of the shopper community very seriously and remain committed to listening to and using that feedback to improve their experience," an Instacart spokesperson told TechCrunch.
This protest is on the heels of a class-action lawsuit over wages and tips, as well as a tipping debacle where Instacart included tips in its base pay for shoppers. Instacart, however, has since stopped that practice and provided shoppers with back pay. Though, Fast Company recently reported that Instacart delivery drivers' tips are mysteriously decreasing.
[...] "What's driving us to do this is a perpetual tug of war shoppers have been engaged in with Instacart for over three years now," Bain said. "We've held actions annually to maintain the pressure and continue the momentum of our organizing. Right now, workers are in the worst financial position we have ever been in. The introduction of algorithmic pay, coupled with their rolling out of On Demand batches (instant offers that don't require being on schedule to accept) have led to variability in pay, and the decline of pay to unprecedented levels."
The revolt of the gig worker.
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