Tasteaway

TasteAway enters the Toronto restaurant delivery space

Over the past couple of years there's been heated competition in the online restaurant delivery space in Toronto. Two main competitors - Just Eat and OrderIt - have been blanketing the city, signing up restaurants to help them reach hungry diners everywhere. Now, there's a new player in town. TasteAway launched earlier this fall and is starting to create some inroads with restaurants such as Amaya Express, Thai Room and Ginger among its current crop of customers.

Earlier this week I connected with founder Constantine Daicos who told me he's been in the industry for three years after stating a site called MenuBaby in Oakville. What he hopes to create with TasteAway is (in his words) a better, more visual marketplace for customers to..."eat with their eyes" and he wants to offer restaurant customers better tools than the competition.

For now, better tools mean restaurants can set delivery zones that don't force them into servicing an entire postal-code, the ability to accept orders from their own website without paying a high commission and the ability to update their own menu whenever they feel like it. They're also mobile-friendly right out of the box with native apps launching in the new year.

What do you think? Will you give TasteAway a try? Do you think they can succeed in what is already a hotly-contested market?


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in Tech

Nintendo to demo its hotly-anticipated Switch 2 console in Toronto

A new wireless provider is coming to Ontario to compete with Bell and Rogers

Canadian telecom companies see huge surge in complaints and Rogers is the worst culprit

A bunch of tech companies in Toronto are hiring and here are some high-paying roles

TTC is about to axe free Wi-Fi service in Toronto subway stations

Canadians could cash in on proposed multimillion-dollar electronics settlements

New tax changes will affect Canadians who earn money using online apps

Bell Canada is hiking prices for TV along with internet and phone plans