Food delivery service DoorDash stepped into the coveted “unicorn” club with its latest $535 million funding round, which values it at $1.4 billion. And CEO Tony Xu wants to make sure the company is “scaling quality as we scale quantity,” Xu told Cheddar. “We’re going to be growing to every zip code in every city in North America. As a result, we have to make sure that we keep focusing on the basics.” DoorDash operates in an increasingly competitive space with brands like Seamless, GrubHub, and UberEats all vying for domination. To stay ahead, Xu says his company focuses on maintaining a variety of merchants. “It starts with offering the broadest selection and offering at the highest quality [with] a consistent level of service.” He pointed out that DoorDash serves 90 percent of the top 100 restaurant brands that offer delivery. “That’s more than all our peers combined.” Going forward, Xu sees DoorDash automating parts of its delivery logistics. “We’ve been working with autonomous delivery systems for about three years now,” said Xu. “It’s really a very difficult problem because you’re talking about solving the first- and last-10-feet problem. So this is going to take some time before it truly develops.” Xu also envisions using DoorDash’s technology to get industries beyond restaurants online. “When you can deliver a burrito hot and deliver ice cream that does not melt, you can deliver just about anything.” But Xu didn’t go into any details of the industries that DoorDash is eyeing next. For the full interview, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/doordash-raises-535-million-in-series-d-funding).

Share:
More In Business
Cboe Celebrates 50th Anniversary
Cheddar News' Courtney Sturgeon reports live from the options trading floor on the 50th annivesrary of Cboe to break down the global impact of the U.S. options industry, and an outlook on the options market.
First Republic Bank Stock Plunges as Depositors Flee
First Republic Bank's stock plunged Tuesday after it said depositors withdrew more than $100 billion during last month’s crisis, with fears swirling that it could be the third bank to fail after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
General Motors Plans to End Production of Chevy Bolt
Strong U.S. sales helped General Motors increase its first-quarter net profit 19% over a year ago, leading the company to raise its full-year earnings guidance on expectations that people will keep buying new vehicles.
Load More