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Farm Business
Agricultural Matters
The End Of Royal Mail?
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<blockquote data-quote="Courier" data-source="post: 8548587" data-attributes="member: 868"><p>Royal Mail and their subsidiaries won’t accept that a delivery is failed at under 28 days whatever the “service” it is sent on. Whereas a mainstream business express carrier (not Hermes, Evri or Yodel) has a totally different attitude to tracking packages, but will not accept a delivery to a PO Box number and their tracking systems show your packages last known whereabouts within seconds of scanning.</p><p>Use a timed service (pre 12) and then you as the sender can track and chase up the item promptly if there is no Proof of Delivery by the allotted time.</p><p>Items sent on a “next day” basis are not deemed “late” until they have arrived back in the delivery depot having been “taken for a ride in the delivery van” along with an unreasonable number of other ubiquitous packages.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Courier, post: 8548587, member: 868"] Royal Mail and their subsidiaries won’t accept that a delivery is failed at under 28 days whatever the “service” it is sent on. Whereas a mainstream business express carrier (not Hermes, Evri or Yodel) has a totally different attitude to tracking packages, but will not accept a delivery to a PO Box number and their tracking systems show your packages last known whereabouts within seconds of scanning. Use a timed service (pre 12) and then you as the sender can track and chase up the item promptly if there is no Proof of Delivery by the allotted time. Items sent on a “next day” basis are not deemed “late” until they have arrived back in the delivery depot having been “taken for a ride in the delivery van” along with an unreasonable number of other ubiquitous packages. [/QUOTE]
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The End Of Royal Mail?
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