Who knows how their business model works? They may well be like those delivery riders. We seem to be heading (back) to some kind of master-servant economy where badly-paid very basic services, standing in a queue on behalf of somebody unknown in this case, seems to be what sort of pay people can get. Maybe it's just a sideline and £200 might be worth that to them. A tenner on top doesn't look like a catastrophic mark-up to me, and maybe it's comparable to the pittance that someone working for the likes of Deliveroo gets.
Who knows how their business model works? They may well be like those delivery riders. We seem to be heading (back) to some kind of master-servant economy where badly-paid very basic services, standing in a queue on behalf of somebody unknown in this case, seems to be what sort of pay people can get. Maybe it's just a sideline and £200 might be worth that to them. A tenner on top doesn't look like a catastrophic mark-up to me, and maybe it's comparable to the pittance that someone working for the likes of Deliveroo gets.