Tony Xu: Building DoorDash from a Startup to a Giant
Tony Xu shipped the first version of DoorDash in 43 minutes using a $9 domain, Google Voice, and Square card readers. Yet while competitors chased dense city centers and venture capital, he and his co-founders drove Hondas through suburban parking lots, discovered that delivery worked faster outside San Francisco than inside, and spent three years rejecting offers from over 100 investors while the business quietly compounded. The question wasn't whether people wanted delivery from restaurants that never offered it before — the question was whether anyone could survive long enough to figure out the thousands of unsexy, invisible details that make a burrito arrive on time. What does it take to build a logistics company disguised as a consumer app, and why does the founder still take customer support calls every single day?
Ключевые выводы
The MVP that launched DoorDash took 43 minutes to build: a $9 domain, eight PDF menus, a Google Voice number, and Square card readers. Xu and his co-founders did every delivery themselves to test whether consumers cared about delivery from restaurants that never offered it.
Counterintuitively, deliveries in suburban Palo Alto were faster and more economical than in dense San Francisco. Single-family homes, easy parking, and hub-and-spoke geography made suburban logistics superior — a discovery that shaped DoorDash's entire expansion strategy.
From 2016 to 2019, DoorDash faced over 100 investor rejections and nearly ran out of cash multiple times, even as internal metrics improved. Xu survived by focusing only on what he could control: growth, profitability, and not running out of money — all three simultaneously.
DoorDash runs tens of thousands of experiments weekly because the physical world is unstructured chaos that cannot be scraped or predicted. The «one in a million event happens a lot» when you do millions of orders a day, so the system must learn constantly.
Xu still does customer support daily and conducts final-round interviews by doing deliveries with candidates or giving them $20 and 8 hours to acquire 100 customers. He hires for «road scholars meet Navy Seals» — people who combine analytical rigor with a bias for action in the physical world.
Вкратце
DoorDash succeeded not by outspending competitors or conquering city centers first, but by doing the unglamorous work themselves — deliveries, customer support, debugging — long enough to discover that the suburbs were faster, that the physical world is chaos, and that the only sustainable advantage is learning thousands of tiny things your competitors will never see.
The 43-Minute MVP and the Suburb Discovery
DoorDash launched in under an hour with PDFs and a Google Voice number.
Tony Xu and his three co-founders shipped the first version of DoorDash — then called PaloAltoDelivery.com — in 43 minutes. They bought a $9 domain, uploaded eight PDF menus from restaurants they frequented, and set up a Google Voice number that rang their cell phones. When customers called, the founders took orders manually, placed them at restaurants, picked them up, delivered them, and collected payment using Square card readers plugged into iPhone audio jacks. The entire operation ran out of Xu's bank account, which also held his student debt.
The insight that shaped DoorDash came from an anomalous experiment: deliveries in suburban Palo Alto were consistently faster than in dense San Francisco. Easy parking, single-family homes, and a hub-and-spoke street layout made suburban logistics superior to navigating city apartment complexes and scarce parking. Xu realized most of America looked like Palo Alto, not San Francisco. The target customer wasn't a single urbanite who could walk to restaurants — it was a mom with young children in the suburbs who didn't want to pack a stroller, load kids into a car, and navigate a crowded parking lot. That customer had the highest organic demand, and DoorDash could serve her faster and more economically than competitors chasing city centers.
Why the Founders Did Every Delivery Themselves
Doing the work revealed thousands of invisible failure points competitors never saw.
“One of the things you really needed was you needed to just do things. So much that's challenging about the physical world is you have no control. We don't get to control when you hit that order button. We don't get to control whether or not a dasher accepts or rejects an order. We don't get to control how slow or how fast somebody makes an item or how in stock or out of stock some item is.”
The Three Questions That Defined the Y Combinator Summer
Would consumers pay $6, restaurants pay 15%, and drivers work for DoorDash wages?
Consumer Willingness to Pay Would customers pay $6 per delivery? The team tested this by continuing to do deliveries themselves and tracking repeat orders from a small, loyal user base at Stanford.
Restaurant Commission Tolerance Would restaurants partner for a 15% commission? DoorDash targeted restaurants that had turned down delivery orders because they had no logistics capability — a baker showed Xu a 3-inch binder of rejected orders.
Driver Supply Economics Could DoorDash afford a wage that attracted drivers? An early experiment offered 20 Uber drivers and 20 DoorDash drivers $25/hour to switch. Only one person switched, revealing two completely different labor pools with different motivations.
The Stanford Football Game Disaster
Three months in, DoorDash was late on every order and refunded 40% of cash.
The Stanford Football Game Disaster
Three months after launch, a Stanford football game created a surge of dinner orders DoorDash couldn't fulfill. The team had no dashers on the road and no ability to pause the website. Every delivery was at least an hour late. Xu and his co-founders tallied the refunds — 40% of their remaining cash, leaving them just days from bankruptcy. No customer asked for a refund, but the founders issued them anyway. Then they stayed up all night baking cookies and delivered them at 5 a.m. before customers woke. Xu's takeaway: «We'd rather die trying to be excellent than live to be mediocre.»
The Thousand Days of Hell: 100+ Rejections While Metrics Improved
From 2016 to 2019, DoorDash raised a fraction of competitors' capital despite growing.
In January 2016, after three years of operation, Xu took his first vacation — five days in Hawaii with his wife, whom he had never taken on a honeymoon. He had a verbal term sheet for a Series C round. The investor told him to relax and close the deal when he returned. A week later, public markets tanked. LinkedIn and Salesforce dropped 30–40% in days. Analysts declared the bubble was bursting. Investors backed out of the DoorDash round.
For three years, DoorDash could raise very little capital while competitors like Uber and Amazon flooded the market. The narrative turned toxic: DoorDash would never be profitable, couldn't beat better-funded rivals, and was in a «forever money-losing business.» Xu received over 100 rejections. Yet internal metrics told a different story: repeatability across cities, improving unit economics, organic growth without a marketing budget. The only reason DoorDash wasn't profitable was because it kept launching new markets, which required upfront investment in driver supply. Xu focused on what he could control: keep growing, get more profitable, don't run out of cash. All three simultaneously, no «or» statements. He maintained his exercise routine, scheduled date nights, and built genuine friendships at work so the mission was bigger than his own psychology.
The Learning System: Tens of Thousands of Experiments Per Week
Customer Support as Executive Strategy
Xu handles support tickets daily to see problems data dashboards hide.
Tony Xu does customer support every single day — emails, chats, sometimes phone calls. He looks for the longest, most detailed complaints, especially from dashers who write 2,000-word emails documenting why the logistics algorithm failed. He treats these as debugging exercises, tracing every step of the physical and digital breakdown. Then he calls the customer to test his hypothesis. The goal: spotlight an anecdote that can improve the product at scale.
Xu insists the magic of DoorDash is in «all the things you can't see.» Customers don't think about the dasher experience, the restaurant integration, or the dispatch algorithm while ordering lunch. But those invisible systems are what make DoorDash an end-to-end experience that's difficult to replicate. Customer support is the best observability tool: «The greatest killer of a business is usually silence.» When customers care enough to write, even angrily, they're giving the company free debugging data. Xu also wants the entire company to maintain this habit — if the CEO does support daily, it sets the standard that the only religion at DoorDash is solving customer problems, not optimizing for revenue or profit metrics investors care about.
Hiring Road Scholars Who Meet Navy Seals
DoorDash hires for bias for action, not prestigious résumés or coding skill alone.
Key Numbers from DoorDash's Early Days
The company operated on radically constrained resources for years.
The Eternal Mission: Grow and Empower Local Economies
DoorDash exists to make small businesses win, which makes cities thrive.
“The eternal mission of DoorDash is to grow and empower local economies. The reason why it's eternal is because the best way to grow the GDP or the happiness or the safety of a city is by making the small, medium, and large businesses in that city successful. They produce the vast majority of jobs and consumption dollars for the economy and the monies for the police department, the fire department, the parks, the schools, the hospitals. The question is, how do you actually make them successful?”
Beyond Burritos: DoorDash as Infrastructure for Any Business
DoorDash now warehouses inventory, builds merchant apps, and deploys autonomous vehicles.
Most people think of DoorDash as a consumer app for lunch and dinner. Xu sees it as infrastructure for any local business. In 2014, a California farmer who ran hundreds of trucks distributing produce asked if DoorDash could handle logistics. Xu said «not yet,» but the question stuck. Today, DoorDash offers Dasher Fulfillment Solutions — warehousing and inventory management for retailers like Kroger and CVS. It's building purpose-built autonomous vehicles (DoorDash Dot) that travel on roads, sidewalks, and bike lanes, solving the «last 10 feet» problem that robo-taxis can't address. It partners with Waymo and runs experiments to close car doors passengers leave open.
The vision: deliver everything inside a city. There are tens of millions of items in any city; DoorDash delivers a «very small fraction» today. To scale, it must structure chaotic, unscraped physical-world data — what's in stock, where it's located, how to get it to a customer's door. Xu wants DoorDash to be the first phone call for any business problem: «Can you help us build our app? Acquire customers? Analyze retention? Store inventory?» If done right, DoorDash becomes the platform to test any retail idea without opening a store — like giving entrepreneurs access to logistics, warehousing, and customer discovery infrastructure at low cost.
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