Hmmm...serious lecturing from ignorance, dude. Really. I covered this before:
So, still no evidence that you can buy a pizza from Pizza Hut, Papa John's, or Domino's with bitcoin. Why am I not surprised that you can't answer such a simple question when challenged? Oh, right, November. But it's April now.
psionl0 said:
You forgot to ask the only question that matters if you are in business: "What difference would it make to my bottom line if I allowed bitcoin payments"? Sure, you can't answer that question with any degree of certainty but there is enough data to allow you to come up with a probability distribution and assess the risks accordingly.
That's sort of what I did when I talked about it. I need to (vastly oversimplified):
* buy ingredients
* pay employees
* pay rent for a location to cook and/or serve
* pay for marketing
I can't do any of those with bitcoin, so receiving bitcoin payments mean I'm putting out real money for the above and getting back a rock that, when I go to convert it to a currency I _can_ do the above with, may or may not have covered the appropriate portion of the above expenses.
The big risk here is that if bitcoin is 'down', I am in real trouble if I have a bunch of rocks and need actual money. I can't time-shift any of the above expenses, they have to happen on a regular basis. So for me to support bitcoin, I am either going to need to have more of a cash reserve than I normally would (because bitcoins are so volatile) or have a completely workable business based on USD _independent_ of my bitcoin transactions as part of that business. Hard to do, since I still use the same employee hours and ingredients to make the pizza whether it gets paid in USD or bitcoin -- the storefront and marketing I can handwave over for awhile as those are fixed costs regardless of the purchases made.
Given the direction the price of bitcoin usually goes, I suspect the odds favour an increased profit.
Except for the times when the price of bitcoin goes the other direction and the odds favour me going bust in a big way because suddenly all my bitcoins are rubbish and I need to buy mozzarella and pay my pie flippers.
I suppose I could just overcharge the hell out of people ($10 USD, $50 BTC) for pizza and that would cover my losses when BTC drops back down. I could even call it "exchange rate costs" or something like that. Not particularly ethical of me, granted, but since it doesn't appear that it's very easy to order pizza with bitcoins in the first place, there's a scarcity thing coming into play.