UpstateNYUPSer(Ret)
Well-Known Member
people are idiots. why should i wast 20 minutes for one package when i can be getting 10-15 off somewhere else?
i agree with upstate on this one.
Thanks but I didn't call them "idiots".
people are idiots. why should i wast 20 minutes for one package when i can be getting 10-15 off somewhere else?
i agree with upstate on this one.
The problem with this approach is that you are enabling your customers to continue doing business in an unacceptable way. They dont have to make any changes because you are doing the work for them. They are using you as a crutch.
I give my customers a reasonable amount of time to fill out a check. I wil even do it for them if asked...but I am not calling ahead on my cellphone. If the package is important enough that they need it right away...it is important enough that they will be prepared to pay for it when it arrives.
I have explained to my customers that a COD pkg is like a pizza. They need to be ready to pay for it when it arrives, becuse I have more "pizzas" to deliver to other customers and they are in the back of the truck getting cold.
big_arrow_up;332990... said:I'll go there three times and their stuff always ends up being put on hold and sits in the center for a few days. NI3s that are C.O.D.s are supposed to be RTS but our sups and OMS coddles this customer as well as a few others. I don't understand why. They cost UPS money in the long wrong.
I also have 1 customer that uses the computer check system.You are right,it is very slow.If this customer has a COD I will make them my last stop so they can take all the time they want.This forum is great in that we can all learn from the experiences of others and offer advice and/or insight in to situations that we may or may not have experienced or may or may not have responded properly to. It is also great in that we can read the advice that has been offered and choose to continue doing what works for us in our particular situation. I have been doing this for 19 years and have to admit I'm pretty good at it so, thanks for the advice, but no thanks.
The customer I am referring to keeps their checkbook on their computer and it takes 2-3 minutes to log in to the program so the time that I spend on the phone with them is far less than the time that I would have to stand there waiting. I go by this stop in the p.m. but would rather get the pkgs del the first time and they would rather get them the first time.
BTW, I like cold pizza. It must be a carry over from my college days when cold pizza and warm beer used to be breakfast.
They have a NM3X put on hold? I wonder how they justify that to the shipper.What shows up when it is tracked? My manager is very strict when it comes to this stuff.He wants it off the car,given to the clerk and rts'd that night.No kissing anyone's ass here.OCAs are one thing but for deliveries I think that if a customer that gets deliveries every day is causing us to go back for second or third attempts because they aren't prepared with C.O.Ds., or simply because they are never open on time, then UPS should make it mandatory that their packages be placed on hold at the center instead of being loaded on a truck for delivery so we don't have to waste so much time and money on them. I've been told that after a second attempt there is is no profit from the packages. I deliver to an "Urban Clothing Store" that opens late and never has the money for the packages. I'll go there three times and their stuff always ends up being put on hold and sits in the center for a few days. NI3s that are C.O.D.s are supposed to be RTS but our sups and OMS coddles this customer as well as a few others. I don't understand why. They cost UPS money in the long wrong.
Thanks but I didn't call them "idiots".
I got an OCA yesterday for a building with 4 companies and 3 floors. The OCA information didn't give a company name or suite number. It did however, give a person's name and the following information on my DIAD: needs GRD ASD and call 617-xxx-xxxx when you arrive.
This is a first. I didn't know I now have to call a one-time customer to alert him of my presence. I didn't know where he worked so I called him from my cell (seems like I'm using more and more minutes for UPS than I should) and he said "OK I'll be down in five minutes." When he gets down to the lobby at 4 minutes (I clocked him), he says he needs to go to his car to get the package. He comes back 5 minutes later with a package that has a label from the package shipped to him(lord help me here,
). I ask him where do you want it shipped to? He says "hold on" (more wasted time) and pulled out a piece of paper that he ripped in half and gave to me.
He then asks "do I get a reciept?" I say NO, because I'm not wasting another second with this person. I will fill out the ground ASD when I have a down minute.
How much of this nonsense do we have to tolerate? I wasted almost fifteen minutes of time for one ground package that we probably got negative $30 in revenue because this person didn't provide any billing information (I used the shipper number from the previous consignee) to me!
If I didn't take the package, I would have been called back later in the day and I would have spent another 15 minutes explaining shipper#'s and third party billing with this fool.
I really don't think we should waste our time with this type of customer. The person at the 1-800# (clueless themselves) should guide these people to UPS.com. If they can't figure out how to print a label here, they should be given the address to a handful of local UPS stores.
It should never come to wasting 15-30 minutes of a driver's time for 1 ground package. We also need the local on-car support on this, "No the driver is not coming back today. Tommorow, have the package ready to ship and he will take it when he is in that area."
Am I out of line here?
Idiots are simply customers that haven't been trained.
It's called customer service.
how about building a good relationship with the customer instead ?
it doesnt take long to train a customer , a couple of extra minutes on your second or third time picking up there should solve the problem. I usualy give the customer my cel number and have them call me when the packages are ready. I show them how to prepare the package and fill out any paper work and try to work out a schedual that works for both of us.
they know that I will usually be turning up at a certain time and will call me if they arent going to be ready. I also make it a point to know which driver ( if any ) will be passing by the area later than me so I can call and have them get the package. If you make the effort to work with the customer they will usualy make the effort back. I bet you wouldnt mind waiting 30 mins for 1 packaage if it was at a playboy bunny photo shoot huh !
He's not out line. He's making a legit complaint. If UPS is going to hold its drivers accountable for getting 140 stops (lets say 200 packages) off the car in 9 hours (the usual time a driver is supposed to work) with an hour lunch, its not too much to ask for UPS to provide the assistance the driver needs to complete that task in the designated time. If that means the driver--the guy 'on the ground'--refuses to pick up the package because he doesn't have enough information to get him to where needs to be, that shouldn't get him in trouble. He needs to tell dispatch he doesn't have sufficient information and request the additional information but he should not be responsible for a customer's lack of clarity. In the end, yes, he should make the pick-up but there's got to be a line here....somewhere. -Rocky
Then you will get a message from the center 10 minutes later to go back because the customer is now ready.I would've had to tell him to call the 800 number and reschedule another pickup when he gets everything together. Then I would've left and stop completed the pickup as not ready.
Then you will get a message from the center 10 minutes later to go back because the customer is now ready.