I remember making service on every package. Missed was not acceptable!
+1
I remember making service on every package. Missed was not acceptable!
Not to side track here but your comment reminded me of something that happened the other day. There is a bit of detail here.
Monday, I was told that I had to call our center manager before going out on road. I called, it went to his voice mail. I wasn't fast enough getting out of the yard and ended up having to talk to him anyway. (CRAP!! ) The jist of the conversation was HIS SIDE- that I was the worst one in the (center or district - don't remember, don't care) for sheeting 'missed'. MY SIDE- get preload to not have any misloads.
At this point I have decided that if he is going to be all over my ass for sheeting 'missed' (BTW- I have to call him now if I have ANYTHING 'missed') I am going to be all over his ass for misloads. So my mission this week has been a successful one. I've had a crap load of misloads.
Wednesday morning I had 3 misloads of which I informed him of EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEM!!!! The 3rd one (of course I made sure that each misload was handled with due diligence, INDIVIDUALLY) I get a message back from him, "Let the office know, I'm on a conference call." I LMFAO!!! I sure hope he regretted his conference with me on Monday morning!
Now, wtf is it that we have to be available at their beck and call but when we need them they are NOWHERE to be found. Every morning ask center manager what is being done to correct the misload problem. Be a bigger PITA than this sumbeach. Write down your misloads on a pad of paper as they occur and ask center manager the next morning to initial beside each one!
I remember having too much work and not enough time. That hasn't changed. We did leave the building a 1/2 hour earlier. I wish mgmnt understood how much better we would be if we left earlier.
Local management does.
I remember going through packages designated for rural remote areas (even though they were suburban area) and taking them out for delivery because they were meds or perishable items
!! ) The jist of the conversation was HIS SIDE- that I was the worst one in the (center or district - don't remember, don't care) for sheeting 'missed'.for misloads.
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I miss the company I wanted to work for.
Stealth screwing!The term "local management" is an oxymoron. To refer to someone as a "manager" is to imply that they have the ability to make an operational decision. In todays UPS, the "local management" that we drivers have access to are merely corporate sock puppets who read PCM's and rubber-stamp warning letters. The actual decision-makers of todays UPS would not deign to speak to a mere driver, they send their sock-puppets in to do the talking and take the heat for them. Its a lot easier to screw people over when you dont have to look them in the eye while you are doing it.
email this to corporate this man and his beautiful writing style + mind is almost word for word & thought for thought how I feel. I'm just not smart Enough to type it. This guys posts just keep bringing me back to the brown cafe.I remember when we were a first-rate delivery company instead of a second-rate one.
I remember being proud to be a UPS driver, and knowing that we were the best.
I remember not having to constantly apologize to our customers. I remember not having to constantly invent new excuses for the complete and total incompetence with which we are now managed.
Unless there is a profound and fundamental change to our current style of management in the very near future....I am afraid we are going to go under as a company. We have always been more expensive than FedEx or the post office...but we also put a better product out there. The customers got what they were paying for. Now all they get from us is second-rate service, a bunch of sh%tty excuses, and a bigger bill. Something has to change or we are done.
email this to corporate this man and his beautiful writing style + mind is almost word for word & thought for thought how I feel. I'm just not smart Enough to type it. This guys posts just keep bringing me back to the brown cafe.
soberups,I remember when we were a first-rate delivery company instead of a second-rate one.
I remember being proud to be a UPS driver, and knowing that we were the best.
I remember not having to constantly apologize to our customers. I remember not having to constantly invent new excuses for the complete and total incompetence with which we are now managed.
Unless there is a profound and fundamental change to our current style of management in the very near future....I am afraid we are going to go under as a company. We have always been more expensive than FedEx or the post office...but we also put a better product out there. The customers got what they were paying for. Now all they get from us is second-rate service, a bunch of sh%tty excuses, and a bigger bill. Something has to change or we are done.
Why did ups have to go public? I remember when this was a semi nice place to work. Damm it I remember when this was a great environment. I guess greed changed things. What kind of fun stuff do you remember before we went public and this places atmosphere was way different.
This sums it up to a tee. Everyone in my building feels the same way. It's almost like this company wants to lose bussiness in some sick way. They should have remained private, the way Jim Casey wanted it. I can hear him clawing at his coffin as we speak.I remember when we were a first-rate delivery company instead of a second-rate one.
I remember being proud to be a UPS driver, and knowing that we were the best.
I remember not having to constantly apologize to our customers. I remember not having to constantly invent new excuses for the complete and total incompetence with which we are now managed.
Unless there is a profound and fundamental change to our current style of management in the very near future....I am afraid we are going to go under as a company. We have always been more expensive than FedEx or the post office...but we also put a better product out there. The customers got what they were paying for. Now all they get from us is second-rate service, a bunch of sh%tty excuses, and a bigger bill. Something has to change or we are done.
I remember making service on every package. Missed was not acceptable!