You know, I don't think I've ever used my points. The points feature could completely go away and I'd be fine with that and would continue to use the platform.Cheesehead wrote:I use it all the time to book work lunches and dinners out. I have also used it to book restaurants in places where I will be traveling. I have never experienced a glitch. I like accumulating the points but that is secondary to the convenience of being able to make a reservation at 8 a.m. or 10 p.m. and download it to my calendar. If there is a choice between two restaurants of the same caliber and I can reserve only one on Open Table, I will go with the one on Open Table.
dddane wrote:actually i think they used to have a more liberal points policy and now they expire after a year...
I used OpenTable this week for a reservation at the Wheeling outpost of Tuscany. I blasted the service in the public review as it was very poor, and used the 250 character private review to give a couple of examples and point them to the public review. Which, not surprisingly, does not seem to appear on the OpenTable web site at the present time....Darren72 wrote:Open Table emails you after your dinner and asks you to provide feedback. They give you 720 characters to write an anonymous, but public review and another 250 characters to write feedback directly to the restaurant. If they want thoughtful feedback, a 250 character limit seems highly restrictive.
(The above post is 288 characters.)
One independent study estimates that OpenTable’s fees (comprised of startup fees, fixed monthly fees, and per-person reservation fees) translate to a cost of roughly $10.40 for each “incremental” 4-top booked through OpenTable.com. To put that in perspective, consider that the average profit margin, before taxes, for a U.S. restaurant is roughly 5%. This means that a table of 4 spending $200 on dinner would generate a $10 profit. In this example, all of that profit would then go to OpenTable fees for having delivered the reservation, leaving the restaurant with nothing other than the hope that that customer would come back (and hopefully book by telephone the next time).
jimswside wrote:Over the past year or so I have used Open Table quite a bit, cashing in a few points redemtions along the way. Been pretty happy with the results.
One question, I notice an upcoming reservation @ Topolobampo will get me 0 dining points. First time I have ever seen this. Anyone ever had a zero point table on Open Table?
If you click through to Open Table from the restaurant's website, you often (always?) don't get any points. When I've realized I'm not getting points, I've opened another browser and made the reservation from there.jimswside wrote:Over the past year or so I have used Open Table quite a bit, cashing in a few points redemtions along the way. Been pretty happy with the results.
One question, I notice an upcoming reservation @ Topolobampo will get me 0 dining points. First time I have ever seen this. Anyone ever had a zero point table on Open Table?
dddane wrote:i use it frequently too, but it seems not enough for my points to accumulate to anything useful. actually i think they used to have a more liberal points policy and now they expire after a year...
Do dining reward points expire?
Yes, dining points will expire if your account has been inactive for 12 months. If you do not make and honor a reservation within this timeframe, your points will expire. You can view all point activity, including expiration on your "My Profile" page.
Sweet Willie wrote:By the way, is there a "best restaurant using OpenTable points" or "best use of OpenTable points in Chicago" thread on LTH?
Darren72 wrote:Sweet Willie wrote:By the way, is there a "best restaurant using OpenTable points" or "best use of OpenTable points in Chicago" thread on LTH?
Aren't Open Table points/checks equivalent to cash at any restaurant that uses Open Table?
Hotel booking giant Priceline.com announced Friday morning that it will acquire OpenTable for $2.6 billion. Priceline will pay $103 per share in the all cash transaction, a 46% premium over the restaurant reservation platform’s closing price Thursday
riddlemay wrote:Thanks, Steve. Sometime after writing that post, I tried switching browsers (from Safari to Chrome), and the site behaved normally. So maybe it's a Safari/OpenTable problem.
OpenTable Began a Revolution. Now It’s a Power Under Siege.
at NewYorkTimes.com, Daniel Victor wrote:Danny Beck, the owner of the Pearl’s Southern Comfort restaurant in Chicago’s Edgewater neighborhood, began noticing such no-shows, often at crucial moneymaking times, at an unusual frequency in recent months. Such failed reservations leave tables open for hours, depriving servers of tips and forcing walk-in diners to be turned away.