Friday night’s alright for fighting In his bi-monthly column, F&B expert Matt Harris serves up food for thought (with plenty of takeaways advice) from the inhospitable world of hospitality. Written by Matt Harris Published on 28 February 2026 Our experts We are a team of writers, experimenters and researchers providing you with the best advice with zero bias or partiality. Last Friday, the delivery OG Uber Eats pulled a vanishing act right in the middle of the dinner rush. For a few frantic hours, orders vanished into the ether, as thousands of kitchen-avoiders realised the “Help” button on their phones was a misnomer.But the real disaster wasn’t a tech error; it was human. When the system crashed, the customer support bots – you know the soulless algorithms we’re told are the future of customer service – collapsed too. Restaurant owners were left shouting into a digital void while the hangry took their frustrations out on the only people they could find: the people behind the counter. It’s the ultimate hospitality catfishing. We’ve been sold a dream of “frictionless” scaling, but when the friction actually hits, these tech giants disappear faster than a ghost kitchen in a tax raid, leaving you to pick up the pieces of your clientele’s broken burger/tandoori/pad thai dreams.Put simply, if you don’t have a direct line to your customer, you don’t own a business; you own a franchise of someone else’s glitch.Here’s what you can do:The 10% direct bribe: Every delivery bag must contain a “next time, call us” voucher. 10% off for them, 20% more margin for you.Phone a friend: Keep a dedicated phone line for locals. In a world of bots, a human voice saying, “I’ve got your burger right here” is a premium luxury.Data is your lifeboat: If you don’t have your regulars’ email addresses, you’re missing the boat. Start building your own list today. Matt Harris - Founder of Planet of the Grapes Matt started his Food & Beverage journey aged 19 working at Thresher's in Brixton. With a WSET diploma in wine and spirits under his belt, he went on to establish wine merchants Planet of the Grapes in 2004. Now - at the ripe old age of 52 - Matt's empire includes multiple venues around London including bars in Leadenhall Market and East Dulwich as well as restaurant Fox Fine Wines & Spirits at London Wall. Planet of the Grapes This content is contributed by a guest author. Startups.co.uk / MVF does not endorse or take responsibility for any views, advice, analysis or claims made within this post. Share this post facebook twitter linkedin Tags News and Features Written by: Matt Harris