While some competitors might scramble with delivery logistics, DoorDash is hungry for more action and positioning itself as a content platform, AI firm, and lifestyle brand. Here is what that looks like in practice.
Compensation for your food videos
People in 20 major U.S. cities including Atlanta, Austin, Miami, and San Francisco can now apply to become DoorDash Creators and get compensated for recording short videos of their meals from local restaurants and then posting those directly on its app. Let’s hope their performances aren’t too hammy.
Recipes for food discovery
Many firms find AI to be a sweet and tempting thing, and DoorDash is no exception. Personalized recommendations now appear at the top of the homepage by analyzing past orders, budget preferences, dietary restrictions, time of day, and location, all in real time.
Smart AI tags are an interesting feature with the potential to make a major impact. These tags appear on restaurant menus, so people can filter for specific dishes like vegetarian or high-protein options. The secret sauce is automation. DoorDash’s VP of product revealed that tags are inferred from customer reviews, merchant text, and photos using advanced AI algorithms. The system reads millions of data points and starts to understand food patterns in a way most humans could not at scale.
Even grocery shopping gets the AI treatment with a “Complement your Cart” section that suggests personalized additions to complete shopping lists faster. These AI-powered features launched this week across the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
Appetite for production
The Going Out features may be the most disruptive of the b(r)unch. DoorDash is launching rewards for dining at local restaurants, now live at thousands of restaurants across the U.S. and Australia. For a limited time, all DoorDash users, not just DashPass members, can access these dine-in rewards. SevenRooms integration lets people book reservations directly in the app (the company acquired this platform earlier this year).
Deliveries by Dot the robot
Also this week, DoorDash unveiled Dot, the first commercial autonomous robot built to travel on bike lanes, roads, sidewalks, and driveways. At one-tenth the size of a car, Dot is designed for quick deliveries. Reaching speeds of up to 20 mph (ca. 32 km/h), Dot is built for neighborhood trips to help local businesses meet growing consumer demand.
An ambitious and evolving offering
These developments demonstrate that DoorDash is evolving from a delivery app into a wider food lifestyle platform. Users can now browse nearby stores, compare prices, and view delivery estimates for everything from beauty products to electronics, all powered by the same AI that is reshaping food discovery.
Analysis from July 2025 by Klover revealed that DoorDash’s AI strategy blends large datasets, purpose-built infrastructure, and deep operational integration. This week’s news shows an appetite to develop this even further.
While some rivals may arguably be chasing faster drop-offs, it will be intriguing to see how they react to DoorDash’s latest ambitions.
The post DoorDash Creators Program Pays Users for Food Videos appeared first on eWEEK.
No Responses