AlexG wrote:In the closing of Va Pensiero thread, a poster implied that Groupon math might have done them in (the restaurant was featured in February). Then I clicked on this link and saw that 2800 or so people have already purchased this Groupon. Surely many of those who purchased would have dined there anyway, but knowing nothing about average covers for a night or restaurant economics, this seems like almost too much of a good thing for a restaurant like Mado. You can only use one coupon per table and the coupons expire in a year. Am I wrong? I really want to try Mado, but am hesitating to buy the Groupon because of the sheer numbers..
Anyone think Va P was the restaurant Ellen Malloy suggested was close to going out of business thanks to bad Groupon math?
Quote:
Anyone think Va P was the restaurant Ellen Malloy suggested was close to going out of business thanks to bad Groupon math?
Truly unlikely.
sundevilpeg wrote:Quote:
Anyone think Va P was the restaurant Ellen Malloy suggested was close to going out of business thanks to bad Groupon math?
Truly unlikely.
I agree. She's not his publicist, for one thing, and I can't imagine why Muldrow would be discussing something like that with Malloy - he's chatty, but he's not stupid. Besides, I don't think that VaP's April closure could possibly be closed by a Groupon offering scarcely 60 days earlier.
Anyone think Va P was the restaurant Ellen Malloy suggested was close to going out of business thanks to bad Groupon math?
Where did you get your information that Groupon gets 75%? From my understanding their take is 50%.
Cinnamon Girl wrote:We have been mulling over the groupon thing for awhile. To my knowledge, if a customer buys a $40 gift certificate to my store, Groupon gets $10 and we get $10. So our profit margin would have to be over 25% to break even. The shop only gets the $10, when the coupon is redeemed. Yet groupon is already in possession of their $10. So when the coupons are not redeemed, groupon still gets a little something, but we do not. So lost coupons make are of no benefit to the participating companies, except in the fact that you did not have to give up $40 worth of merchandise. Is this worth it to bring in new business? Still on the fence. If anyone knows of someone who thinks this turned out well for their company, I would love to know about it.
One of my friends used to own the Margarita Inn, a very nice lady. The story of the restaurant takeover was not a pretty one, but perhaps that is not unusual.
If the coupon isn't redeemed, Groupon is getting the whole $20, right (they already have the users' money and aren't paying you since it wasn't redeemed)? The moral of this story seems to be: buy Groupon stock when they IPO.Cinnamon Girl wrote:The shop only gets the $10, when the coupon is redeemed. Yet groupon is already in possession of their $10.
pizano345 wrote:Where did you get your information that Groupon gets 75%? From my understanding their take is 50%.
Sorry, should of clarified better, Groupon isn't making 75% on each gift certificate.
Example: Groupon is selling $100 gift certs for $50. My understanding is of that $50 the consumer pays, the restaurant gets $25 and Groupon gets $25. The restaurant is providing $100 worth of services for $25. Groupon receives $25 for running the program. $50 is given to the customer gratis for buying the gift certificate. Groupon doesn't receive 75%, 75% is the cost to the restaurant when all said and done (minus breakage on unredeemed certs).
Darren72 wrote:It isn't quite right to simply look at the profit you make from a Groupon customer. You need to compare that to the profit you'd make by getting that customer in the restaurant through another form of advertising.
The shop only gets the $10, when the coupon is redeemed. Yet groupon is already in possession of their $10. So when the coupons are not redeemed, groupon still gets a little something, but we do not.
To date, more than 4 million Groupons -- coupons that are activated when a certain number of people commit to buying them -- have been sold. The company will comfortably surpass nine digits in revenue this year.
gleam wrote:Yes, they raised $135 million at a $1.35bn valuation recently:
It's Official: Groupon Announces That $1.35 Billion Valuation Round
For Crystal Nail Salon in Chicago, ratings at web sites like Yelp.com tumbled as owner Phu Bui struggled to serve up the 5,100 manicure-pedicure combinations he sold in June for 65 percent off.
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Bui — who bypassed Groupon's recommendation to limit the number of $28 coupons — says he'll consider offering an online deal again
At Bikram Yoga Milwaukee, owner Bron Gacki had a very un-yoga reaction last month after selling nearly 2,500 Groupon coupons, when he expected to sell 1,000. He almost panicked.