· Operations  · 8 min read

Delivery and Takeout Operations: How to Build a Profitable Off-Premise Channel

60% of customers order delivery or takeout at least weekly, but third-party platform fees of 15-30% can destroy your margins. Here's how to design your space, optimize your menu, and balance platform reach with direct-channel profitability.

60% of customers order delivery or takeout at least weekly, but third-party platform fees of 15-30% can destroy your margins. Here's how to design your space, optimize your menu, and balance platform reach with direct-channel profitability.

Delivery and takeout are no longer side businesses. According to 7shifts, 60% of customers order delivery or takeout at least weekly. The NRA finds that 8 in 10 delivery customers express willingness to use smartphone apps for ordering. McKinsey projects the restaurant industry reaching $1.55 trillion in sales in 2025, with delivery representing a growing share. Many operators are expanding into ghost kitchens and virtual brands to serve delivery demand without dining room overhead.

But here is the tension every operator faces: third-party delivery platform fees typically run 15-30% of order value, according to McKinsey. On a restaurant already operating at 5-10% margins, giving away 15-30% of each delivery order to DoorDash or Uber Eats can make delivery unprofitable — unless you redesign your approach from the ground up.

Designing Your Space for Delivery

The biggest mistake restaurants make with delivery is bolting it onto existing operations without physical adaptation. According to Deliverect, optimizing delivery is as much about physical space design and workflow as it is about software.

Dedicated Packing Area

According to Deliverect, the packing area should be positioned near the kitchen exit in the front-of-house for speed. It needs:

  • Dedicated surface space for assembling orders
  • Accessible packing materials organized by container type
  • A staff member assigned to quality-check every order before handoff

That last point matters more than it sounds. According to Deliverect, missing items or poor-quality orders harm reputation and cut into margins. A dedicated quality check catches the missing drink, the forgotten sauce, the soup that is only half full. Those errors cost you refunds, negative reviews, and lost customers.

Separate Driver Waiting Zone

According to Deliverect, delivery drivers lingering in customer-facing areas create a negative impression on dine-in guests. Best practice includes:

  • Designated parking for drivers
  • Offering water and restroom access
  • Installing a pass-through window from the packing area to the driver pickup point

The pass-through window is the ideal solution. Drivers pick up orders without entering the dining room. Dine-in guests are not surrounded by people in bike helmets holding insulated bags.

Dual Production Lines

According to Deliverect, creating separate stations for delivery versus dine-in orders prevents bottlenecks during peak periods. Staff can cross-support during slow periods while maintaining priority separation during rushes.

This is particularly important during dinner service. A surge of delivery orders at 7 PM can overwhelm a kitchen that is also handling a full dining room. Separate production lines ensure neither channel degrades the other.

Not every dish on your dine-in menu belongs on your delivery menu. A beautifully plated risotto that sits in a container for 30 minutes arrives as a starchy paste. A crispy fried chicken sandwich with a separate pickle pack arrives perfectly.

Delivery Menu Strategy

According to Deliverect, a delivery-optimized menu focuses on items that maintain quality in transit and assemble quickly. Key strategies include:

  • Separate garnish containers to preserve freshness (Deliverect cites Vietnamese pho as an example — broth, noodles, and garnishes packaged separately)
  • Removing complex-plating dishes from the delivery menu, which creates an incentive for dine-in visits
  • Designing packaging that maintains temperature and presentation

Think about what survives 20 minutes in a bag: hearty bowls, tacos, sandwiches, curries, pasta in sauce. Then think about what does not: delicate salads with warm proteins, crispy items that steam in containers, multi-component plates that require precise arrangement.

Kitchen and Scheduling Adaptations

According to Deliverect, smart scheduling must account for demand spikes beyond standard hours. Rainy days and major events often increase delivery demand while dine-in volume stays flat or drops. If you staff based only on your dine-in forecast, rainy Tuesday nights will overwhelm your kitchen with delivery orders you did not plan for.

Build delivery demand forecasting into your scheduling. Track weather patterns against delivery volume. Assign dedicated delivery prep timelines to prevent dine-in service disruption.

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Third-Party Platforms vs. Direct Ordering

This is the most consequential financial decision in your delivery operations.

The Third-Party Math

Third-party platforms (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub) provide access to massive customer bases that direct channels cannot match. But according to McKinsey, they charge 15-30% of order value in commission fees.

On a $30 order with a 25% commission, you keep $22.50. If your food cost is 30% ($9) and your labor and packaging add another $8, you are making $5.50 before overhead. On an order that might have been $30 of pure dine-in revenue with $10+ in profit, you are now barely breaking even.

The Direct Ordering Alternative

According to BentoBox, restaurants retain 20-30% more revenue per order using direct ordering systems versus third-party platforms. BentoBox also reports that three of four website visitors click to initiate orders when pop-ups are deployed.

Direct ordering through your own website or app eliminates commission fees. You pay for the technology (typically a monthly subscription or smaller percentage) and handle fulfillment yourself or through a white-label delivery service.

The Hybrid Approach

Most operators use both. Third-party platforms drive discovery and reach new customers. Direct ordering captures repeat customers at higher margins. According to FoodHub, direct ordering and loyalty programs are a key trend, with restaurants shifting away from platform dependency.

The strategy: use third-party platforms to acquire customers, then convert them to direct ordering through incentives — loyalty points, exclusive menu items, better pricing on direct orders, or simply a card in every delivery bag saying “Order direct and save.”

Order Aggregation

If you are on multiple delivery platforms, you need aggregation. According to Deliverect, order aggregation platforms consolidate multiple delivery channels into a single POS feed, eliminating the need to juggle multiple tablets and preventing re-entry errors.

Running three tablets for three delivery apps — each with separate order entry — is a recipe for mistakes, missed orders, and frustrated kitchen staff. Aggregation solves this.

Delivery Quality: Speed vs. Food Integrity

According to SuperOrder, the central insight about delivery quality is counterintuitive: speed optimization should never come at the expense of food quality. Customers are ordering quality food first. A fast but degraded delivery damages the brand more than a slightly slower but excellent one.

Seven Optimization Areas

According to SuperOrder, delivery optimization requires attention to seven areas:

  1. Driver communication — maintain regular contact to identify operational pain points and route inefficiencies
  2. Geographic clustering — organize orders by proximity, assigning drivers to handle clustered deliveries simultaneously
  3. Traffic anticipation — plan alternate routes and set delivery estimates that account for peak-hour conditions
  4. Accurate time estimates — overpromising generates frustration and negative reviews; realistic windows build trust
  5. Real-time tracking — reduces customer inquiry volume and builds transparency
  6. Quality packaging — insulated containers, appropriate wrapping, and temperature maintenance
  7. Delivery management systems — automate prioritization, route optimization, and analytics

Packaging: Function, Sustainability, and Branding

Packaging serves three purposes: keeping food at the right temperature, reducing waste, and marketing your brand.

Sustainable Options

According to the National Restaurant Association’s sustainable packaging guide, the spectrum of options includes:

MaterialDescriptionKey Consideration
Compostable fiberNatural fiber containers (Chipotle diverts nearly 50% of waste)Requires local commercial composting facilities
Recycled contentPaper, cardboard, plastics with post-consumer contentHigher recycled content = greater sustainability
BagasseFibrous sugarcane byproduct containersPre-consumer recycled, works for hot and cold
PLA (plant-based)Polylactic acid containersWorks well for both hot and cold foods
Wooden cutleryBirch or bambooBiodegradable in home composting

Critical Infrastructure Note

According to the NRA, compostable packaging only benefits the environment when commercial composting facilities exist in your market. Recyclable plastics must meet local recycler specifications. Your packaging choices depend on what your local waste infrastructure can actually handle.

Transition Strategies

According to the NRA, key strategies for moving to sustainable packaging include:

  • Right-sizing containers to match portions — eliminates excess waste and reduces costs
  • Streamlining SKUs to use single sustainable options across multiple menu items
  • Training staff to offer customer choice on cutlery, straws, and condiments
  • Building vendor partnerships with suppliers committed to sustainability

Branded Packaging as Marketing

According to Deliverect, branded packaging transforms delivery containers into marketing vehicles. Include thank-you notes, loyalty discount cards, or promotional materials in every delivery order. The unboxing experience is your only opportunity to make an impression on a delivery customer — make it memorable.

Building Your Delivery Operations Checklist

  • Designate a dedicated packing area near the kitchen exit
  • Create a separate driver waiting/pickup zone away from dining guests
  • Evaluate which menu items travel well and build a delivery-specific menu
  • Choose packaging that maintains food quality and aligns with your brand
  • Set up direct ordering through your website with prominent placement
  • Register on 1-3 third-party platforms based on your market
  • Implement order aggregation if using multiple platforms
  • Build delivery-specific demand forecasting into scheduling
  • Assign quality-check responsibility for every outgoing order
  • Include branded marketing materials in every delivery bag
  • Track delivery metrics: order accuracy, delivery time, customer ratings

The Bottom Line

Delivery and takeout are not going away — they are growing. According to the archive sources, 60% of customers order off-premise at least weekly, and that percentage is climbing. The restaurants that thrive in this environment are the ones that treat delivery as a designed operation, not an afterthought.

That means redesigning your space, optimizing your menu for travel, investing in quality packaging, balancing platform reach against direct-channel profitability, and never sacrificing food quality for speed. According to SuperOrder, customers order quality food first. Get the food right, get the packaging right, and get the operations right — and delivery becomes a profitable growth channel instead of a margin-destroying obligation.

→ Read more: Ghost Kitchens and Virtual Brands: Operating Without a Dining Room → Read more: POS Systems for Restaurants: How to Choose the Right Platform in 2026 → Read more: The Real Impact of Delivery Platforms on Restaurant Profitability: A Data-Driven Analysis

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