How many are useful, garbage JD.com tied together for 16 yuan, three yuan per order, damn
币圈半边天
--
Why Do Meituan Riders Prefer to Get Soaked Rather Than Switch to JD?
On that rainy day, I was squatting at the convenience store entrance to avoid the rain when I saw Meituan rider Old Zhang putting a raincoat on his electric bike. I casually asked, 'I heard JD provides five insurances and one fund for riders; why don’t you switch jobs?' He wiped the rain off his face and shoved his phone in front of me: 'Look! Yesterday, delivering ten pounds of watermelon to the sixth floor on JD earned me 9 yuan 2; delivering three cups of milk tea over two kilometers on Meituan earned me 15 yuan — guess which one I’d choose?'
1. The 'Invisible Battlefield' Behind Orders
JD.com delivery orders are the 'heavy industry of physical labor.' Fresh food orders make up the majority; the riders are either carrying rice or hugging watermelons, and after climbing six flights of stairs, their clothes can be wrung out. One rider joked: 'After delivering JD orders, I could directly apply for a job as a mover at a construction site.' In contrast, Meituan's orders are densely packed like pearls in milk tea; during the lunch rush, one could complete 15 orders of braised chicken in three hours, and the system's notification sound is louder than firecrackers.
Disclaimer: Includes third-party opinions. No financial advice. May include sponsored content.See T&Cs.