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is there something that categorises it differently to you?
My logic at the time (I don't live in the UK anymore) was as @frankenbike said: I've spent £30 on a curry, a £1 coin makes no difference.
To be honest I never really thought about comparing the conditions of other delivery drivers, but yes, there's a difference, in the sense that my ebay purchases would be delivered at work, along with a lot of other parcels, whereas with food the rider comes to the second floor to my front door. It feels more personal somehow.
A few years ago I was for a while on a zero hour contract, where tips would have been welcome...
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I get how the personal element can effect it.
I’ve worked a variety of crap paid jobs. Once at a bar where the people had more money than sense and I didn’t like getting tipped or harassed into taking part in games etc. Something I’d imagine women are more subjected to in certain environments and find even more uncomfortable.
Without starting a massive slanging match. Are Deliveroo etc any different from say Hermes in terms of rubbish employment terms etc. I can’t imagine people tipping your Hermes delivery?
Genuine question is there something that categorises it differently to you?