By Heather Haddon and Parmy Olson 

In its $7 billion deal to buy Grubhub Inc., a Dutch food-delivery giant is betting on a strategy it has relied on for years in Europe: Let restaurants deliver their own food.

Earlier this month, Just Eat Takeaway.com NV swooped in after Uber Technologies Inc.'s plan to join Grubhub with Uber Eats foundered. It comes less than a year after Amsterdam-based Takeaway.com, one of dozens of local online delivery startups that have emerged in recent years, agreed to buy London-based Just Eat for roughly $8 billion.

That deal created a publicly listed European colossus with a North American entry point as Just Eat had earlier bought Canada's SkipTheDishes. That foothold would grow significantly if the deal for Chicago-based Grubhub deal goes through, with global sales of the combined company topping those of Uber Eats, according to 2019 figures.

The rapid deal making has been underpinned by Just Eat Takeaway's belief that the future of its business lies in having restaurants handle the delivery part themselves, avoiding the costs of building fleets of drivers and cyclists to transport meals to customers.

Both Just Eat Takeaway and Grubhub have some driver networks of their own, but their businesses revolve around taking a cut from restaurants and chains that use their websites to advertise and take orders. U.S. rivals like Uber Eats, DoorDash Inc. and Postmates Inc. use their own drivers for almost all deliveries.

"We don't put people on bikes," said Jitse Groen, who founded Takeaway.com in 2000 and took it public in 2016. Last year, it recorded its first annual profit since its initial public offering, crediting its "marketplace" model.

Mr. Groen, 42 years old, who would become chief executive of the combination with Grubhub, describes the approach as based simply on facilitating messages between restaurants and customers. "As long as we send messages, we make money," he said. "That's why marketplace is just a superior business model."

More than three-quarters of Just Eat's deliveries globally are done by the restaurants themselves, the company says. That has allowed it to sidestep both the costs of building a fleet and the logistical and legal headache of managing workforces across national borders.

It is a tack similar to that taken by Grubhub, which does about half of the deliveries it processes. Founder Matt Maloney has known Mr. Groen for years. Conducting talks remotely, they struck their deal in five weeks, Mr. Maloney said.

Delivery can be the largest expense in an online food order, amounting to around 25% of an order's overall cost, Grubhub says. When an online service does the delivery, it passes along the expense. However, restaurant contributions don't always cover the cost, especially in the case of big chains, which are able to negotiate lower rates for themselves.

Independent restaurants, meanwhile, have criticized the delivery companies for taking cuts of up to 30% to handle their orders.

Mr. Groen says he was attracted to Grubhub's profitable strongholds in large, densely populated cities like New York. He recently told analysts that he wasn't in a hurry to expand into less-dense parts of the U.S., citing Arizona as an example. He said he can afford to spend a long time competing with rivals who have established delivery fleets in those places.

"They're essentially giving food away for free," he said on an investor call. "With logistics, you can't make any money."

Uber Eats said last month that it was profitable in more than 150 cities globally, up from 100 late last year. The company has exited a number of global markets where it couldn't make money to focus on the ones where it believes it can.

Just Eat's strategy faces big challenges in the U.S. DoorDash and Uber Eats have grown much faster than Grubhub, according to credit-card data from research firm Second Measure. They can more easily coordinate orders across multiple restaurants and customers as they have a greater percentage of deliveries done by their own networks, said Jason Helfstein, an internet analyst at Oppenheimer & Co.

"We can create a lot of efficiency by actually aggregating the quality of the logistics needs from many, many restaurants," Uber Eats Vice President Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty said in response to questions about the company's view of the Just Eat-Grubhub deal at a tech conference earlier this week.

DoorDash and Uber Eats, in particular, have established themselves in many American suburbs, building delivery fleets from scratch through on-demand networks of workers. Many restaurants -- especially those only now exploring delivery -- don't want to hire delivery workers for the same reason Just Eat and Grubhub try to avoid them. Drivers can be costly, challenging to manage, and churn is high.

Restaurants "really want to hand it out," said Brendan Witcher, a senior analyst with Forrester Research and former restaurateur, referring to delivery tasks.

Dave Boennighausen, chief executive of Noodles & Co., a 450-unit chain of fast-casual restaurants geared toward suburban markets, said he prizes the delivery networks provided by DoorDash and Uber Eats. Both integrated their systems with his chain's order handling, and orders can be processed more efficiently than if the restaurants were doing it on their own, he says.

"We've had a good experience with DoorDash and Uber Eats from that perspective," Mr. Boennighausen said.

Grubhub's Mr. Maloney, 44, said the proposed merger will allow for more cash to improve incentives for diners and restaurants. Some restaurateurs are also welcoming the tie-up, hopeful it will help Grubhub compete better with rivals and provide more options.

"We would hope it makes them a stronger player," said Scott Gittrich, president of Toppers Pizza, a 65-unit chain that uses all of the big delivery services, though he currently does the most business through DoorDash. "We really want the competition to work for us."

Write to Heather Haddon at heather.haddon@wsj.com and Parmy Olson at parmy.olson@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

June 27, 2020 10:14 ET (14:14 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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