I work as a shipping clerk. My job is to take packages that the stock clerks collected, box them, and ship them via USPS/FedEx/UPS (plus others), as requested by our customers. Most of the time, this works just fine.
However, sometimes UPS loses Ground packages in their warehouses. They either get shoved in a corner to be dealt with later, or get tossed on a truck to the wrong distro hub (such as one entire bag of packages that got sent to New York once).
And once in a while, as a result of this, we get a customer who is VERY ANGRY that their Ground shipment isn't showing up in UPS Tracking the very next business day. The most recent being a sterling example of the sort of behavior I'm pissed about.
The customer won an eBay auction on Thursday evening. His widget was dutifully collected from the stock shelves by one of our stock guys, and brought with its packing slips to shipping. I boxed it, shipped it, and sent it out the door with the rest of the day's shipments. It was, in every way, a completely normal transaction.
So Monday comes, and we get an email from the customer. A very angry, aggressive email about how there's no tracking information - it just shows that a shipping label was printed - and that the UPS customer service people told him that means that it was never picked up here, and that it must still be here. Which is flat out wrong, and probably a blatant lie (either by the customer in claiming to have talked to UPS, or by the UPS CSR in claiming that it ONLY means that it hasn't been picked up).
Why am I assuming that it's a lie? Well, any CSR that has worked for UPS for any significant period of time should know that most Ground packages don't actually get scanned at the time of pick-up, only once they've been processed at the local hub. Since they're Ground, they're a lower priority, and sometimes do get left until the next day to be dealt with, if there's a high volume of higher-priority package traffic.
Back on point. At this point, the customer - who is having his package delivered to a hotel he's staying at - starts declaring that it MUST be delivered by Wednesday, or there's going to be trouble. And since we didn't ship it Friday, it obviously won't be there in time, so we should compensate him for that.
Excuse me? You're the one who chose Ground shipping, instead of something guaranteed, like, say, UPS Orange (Three-Day). The first order of blame lies with you, the customer, for your choice of shipping method for what you claim is an urgent delivery. Why did you pick the least urgent shipping method possible (UPS soft-guarantees Ground delivery "within 10 days to anywhere in the Continental US," which also includes packages traveling 2 miles, but they don't actually backstop that "guarantee" with any reimbursement or compensation if something fails to meet that deadline). If you needed it in 3 business days, that was obviously the wrong shipping option. (Answer: He wanted to be cheap).
So Tuesday comes and goes, and the package's shipping status remains unchanged. No new emails from the customer, thankfully, but we're already pretty sure that he's going to Neg us out of spite over this. Now it's Wednesday, and lo and behold, the package appears in the system! And it says that it was picked up on Tuesday. =O_o=
Never mind that we can prove that it left our possession on Friday. We have a Daily Summary Report that the UPS software spits out, and the UPS driver signs. That removes pretty much all culpability from us right there, since that package went out with the rest of them on Friday, and was signed for by the driver.
So, obviously, there's several levels of suck here. There's the customer, who picked a poor choice for shipping speed. There's UPS, who has lied about the status through both their CSRs AND through their website.
And now the shipment is showing that it'll be delivered by the end of the day... tomorrow. Not within his made-up deadline. So I'm sure that we'll hear from him again.
- - - - -
We had another customer that this happened to several months back. This guy is a regular customer whose business is local - it's only about 20 miles from us, and he ships Ground as a matter of course, because most packages arrive the next day, even with Ground shipping. But one shipment in particular happened to be both urgent, AND didn't show up the next day.
He called and yelled at us. He called and yelled at UPS. He called and yelled at us again, because UPS said it was our fault. We calmly explained the situation. And we all waited. Three days later, the package showed up halfway across the country, and the customer - being a generally reasonable individual - set his sights on shouting his way up the UPS chain of command.
And to this day, he now comes to our facility to pick up any shipments that are urgent, rather than rely on UPS.
However, sometimes UPS loses Ground packages in their warehouses. They either get shoved in a corner to be dealt with later, or get tossed on a truck to the wrong distro hub (such as one entire bag of packages that got sent to New York once).
And once in a while, as a result of this, we get a customer who is VERY ANGRY that their Ground shipment isn't showing up in UPS Tracking the very next business day. The most recent being a sterling example of the sort of behavior I'm pissed about.
The customer won an eBay auction on Thursday evening. His widget was dutifully collected from the stock shelves by one of our stock guys, and brought with its packing slips to shipping. I boxed it, shipped it, and sent it out the door with the rest of the day's shipments. It was, in every way, a completely normal transaction.
So Monday comes, and we get an email from the customer. A very angry, aggressive email about how there's no tracking information - it just shows that a shipping label was printed - and that the UPS customer service people told him that means that it was never picked up here, and that it must still be here. Which is flat out wrong, and probably a blatant lie (either by the customer in claiming to have talked to UPS, or by the UPS CSR in claiming that it ONLY means that it hasn't been picked up).
Why am I assuming that it's a lie? Well, any CSR that has worked for UPS for any significant period of time should know that most Ground packages don't actually get scanned at the time of pick-up, only once they've been processed at the local hub. Since they're Ground, they're a lower priority, and sometimes do get left until the next day to be dealt with, if there's a high volume of higher-priority package traffic.
Back on point. At this point, the customer - who is having his package delivered to a hotel he's staying at - starts declaring that it MUST be delivered by Wednesday, or there's going to be trouble. And since we didn't ship it Friday, it obviously won't be there in time, so we should compensate him for that.
Excuse me? You're the one who chose Ground shipping, instead of something guaranteed, like, say, UPS Orange (Three-Day). The first order of blame lies with you, the customer, for your choice of shipping method for what you claim is an urgent delivery. Why did you pick the least urgent shipping method possible (UPS soft-guarantees Ground delivery "within 10 days to anywhere in the Continental US," which also includes packages traveling 2 miles, but they don't actually backstop that "guarantee" with any reimbursement or compensation if something fails to meet that deadline). If you needed it in 3 business days, that was obviously the wrong shipping option. (Answer: He wanted to be cheap).
So Tuesday comes and goes, and the package's shipping status remains unchanged. No new emails from the customer, thankfully, but we're already pretty sure that he's going to Neg us out of spite over this. Now it's Wednesday, and lo and behold, the package appears in the system! And it says that it was picked up on Tuesday. =O_o=
Never mind that we can prove that it left our possession on Friday. We have a Daily Summary Report that the UPS software spits out, and the UPS driver signs. That removes pretty much all culpability from us right there, since that package went out with the rest of them on Friday, and was signed for by the driver.
So, obviously, there's several levels of suck here. There's the customer, who picked a poor choice for shipping speed. There's UPS, who has lied about the status through both their CSRs AND through their website.
And now the shipment is showing that it'll be delivered by the end of the day... tomorrow. Not within his made-up deadline. So I'm sure that we'll hear from him again.
- - - - -
We had another customer that this happened to several months back. This guy is a regular customer whose business is local - it's only about 20 miles from us, and he ships Ground as a matter of course, because most packages arrive the next day, even with Ground shipping. But one shipment in particular happened to be both urgent, AND didn't show up the next day.
He called and yelled at us. He called and yelled at UPS. He called and yelled at us again, because UPS said it was our fault. We calmly explained the situation. And we all waited. Three days later, the package showed up halfway across the country, and the customer - being a generally reasonable individual - set his sights on shouting his way up the UPS chain of command.
And to this day, he now comes to our facility to pick up any shipments that are urgent, rather than rely on UPS.
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