I love startups that blur the line between online and offline. Startups like ZeroCater that are able to offer an online experience that is not purely online or social like many others is an interesting space that I do not think is explored enough. I wish them the best of luck! Nice work guys!
Quick style comment on blog - I'd update the "Check out our website at: ZeroCater.com" on the top right (which I missed the first time I looked) to 18 - 24pt font min or a banner / button for easier finding.
One thing that also always bugs me on blogs is that the big logo links to blog.zerocater.com instead of www.zerocater.com. Why people do this I do not know, but it's very irritating.
I've just read your latest blog post, do you think it's likely I'm looking for more blog posts or your product?
If you’re using a lot of restaurants, it’s a chore to coordinate them. If you’re just using one caterer, it gets boring pretty fast. We let people get the best of both worlds: lots of variety, but simple to use.
We were using a different catering company before moving to ZeroCater (don't remember who off the top of my head). ZeroCater has better food and more variety than that catering company did. I'm not sure if that's indicative of catering companies, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was.
That said, ZeroCater still has its own problems. The biggest one we've had is ZeroCater simply not listening to our requests. It took us a while to get a gluten-free option, for instance, and even longer to get it removed when we no longer needed it. We've also requested no fish several times, and yet we still end up getting fish on occasion.
Overall, though, I'd recommend ZeroCater if you're planning regular team lunches in a city where they offer it and you don't want to deal with the minutiae of it.
Really fantastic idea. I'm glad to see one of the hallmarks of famous status symbols in the tech industry like Google and Facebook is being spread elsewhere to increase productivity.
The blog post reads like this was a new invention, so it matters from that perspective. It maybe inconsequential, however funding is not everything. If they need $1.5 mil to do this, then they need a lot more to run this business. We built everything bootstrapped. Except 2008 was a sucky year for raising money. Today is like 10X easier.
ZeroCater addresses a real need - food. We have this problem in Bangalore, India. We go out everyday to eat food. The choices are limited and food quality gets bad over days.
Solving this problem boils down largely to logistics and ensured food quality. Would be great if someone from India starts a Zerocater equivalent.
Dabbawala system is not available in Bangalore, it is in Mumbai. But Dabbawalas solve a different problem. They are just a well-connected delivery system.
A Question : There is a some local Turkish website called yemeksepeti.com ( = food basket/cart. They have english version of their web site if you want to check ) which in service since 2001. One can see the menu and order any meal from the member resaturans and get his food in 10 to 40 minutes without paying extra fee.
If one implements the same system, he can kill the middle man. What prevents other start-ups to do that and how can zerocater protect it's business ?
In the US, the delivery of food is not free. There are lots of services (Zifty is one example -- https://www.zifty.com/) which are entirely based around being food delivery middle-men. When you order from a restaurant and you request your food to be delivered, it is standard practice for you to be charged more.
I met you when Mike was an intern at justin.tv--really glad to see that ZeroCater is working out! Maybe we'll make the switch over once we move to the new office..
You don't even have to choose what restaurant you get food from.
You tell them "6 vegetarians, 2 vegans, 1 person with a peanut allergy, 12 other people, we need food wednesday and friday for lunch at noon" and they make it happen.