Although they let you down, it was a favour remember.
But what if they owed the OP, a favour?
Although they let you down, it was a favour remember.
I would agree with this. Its all down to how good the individual driver who is dealing with your delivery, is. Some drivers are a little dim and don't give a damn about making deliveries. Others want to deliver the parcel no matter what and will go the extra mile to successfully deliver the item. As an example, my local Parcelforce driver, attempted to deliver the same parcel 3 times in a single day, to me. He succeeded the 3rd time.
I've not had any problems with DPD, but have had some serious issues with CityLink.
Bad Courier - CityLink
One example was when I ordered a projector screen from Germany. The seller sent the screen on time.
A week later, I still hadnt received anything. Not even a note through my letterbox.
I contacted the seller, who in turn contacted the German courier, who in turn contacted CityLink, UK. The seller sent me a phone number to find out what was going on. Upon phoning them, they said they attempted delivery twice (liers). At this point I said, can you deliver tomorrow? What now ensued were a series of phone-calls and excuses why they couldn't deliver it. In the end it transpired that they had ran over the screen with a truck. The package was so damaged that they too embarrassed to attempt to deliver it to me. Rather than tell me the truth they made up a lot of stories which cost me another week or so.
In the end the seller had to send me another screen which arrived within 2-3 days (as scheduled).
The Best Service - Royal Mail/Parcelforce
Once I was awaiting a package. The seller had inadvertantly forgotten to write down a postcode or door number - hey only wrote down my name and street name...nothing else.
The package arrived a day later than scheduled, with a note saying, "In future write down the full address". I was in awe, given that Royal Mail managed to track down my address and deliver the parcel to me, using only my name. I'm positive that had Citylink or DPD been dealing with this parcel, it would've either been sent back to sender OR ended up in the bin.
He had tracked my number down by ringing up my old workplace and told me he was in the area and wondered if I could take delivery of speakers. I rushed out of work in my lunch break and within 30min I was home and true to his word he arrived with the speakers. Now that's what I call service.
You get good drivers and you get bad drivers. Then you also get good drivers who are willing to pull out the stops, and good drivers who are not willing to pull out the stops, doing exactly what you ask of them but no more.
Drivers generally don't get company phones or anything like that so if they are ringing you etc they are doing it out of their own pockets. It's like any job I suppose, you get people who take pride in their work and people who don't. I've been into Tesco and asked for something and been given the equivalent of a personal shopper experience, and then there are times where I've been grunted at and largely ignored.
We failed a collection for one of my clients recently as the driver broke down. I couldn't source a replacement, the job was urgent and local to me - so I did it myself. Went to the guy's house, picked the item up, did the paperwork, dropped it in to the local depot to meet the next sortation. I don't know anyone in my office who would have even considered doing that. It's the same with some drivers.
In my own experience with our drivers - they prioritise business drops over residential drops, they like to do their deliveries in the morning and their collections in the afternoon, if they are struggling for time in the afternoon then daily collections will take priority over any deliveries left on. They knock doors etc because they would rather deliver your parcel than have to take it back out the next day. They gain *NOTHING* by doing the "knock and run" routine that some people think courier drivers are obsessed with. What you DO occasionally get is a driver who says he attempted when he didn't, this does nothing but cause me aggro and I wish they'd just be honest and admit that they ran out of time.
As a company we try to be honest at all times. It's easier for me to do this as I look after major clients not Joe Public so I speak to the same people all the time and we have a rapport. If we've loaded something to the wrong round, or an item has missed sort at the hub, I tell them that. I gain nothing by making up a cover story.
When I've had complaints about drivers in the past over the years, in 90% of the investigations I've had to do it's been the customer in the wrong, not the driver. You'd be surprised when push comes to shove how many "I WAS HOME ALL DAY!" stories eventually turn into "Well, I did nip out for half an hour, and I popped down the garden for a bit, so I suppose he might have come then..."
I've been into Tesco and asked for something and been given the equivalent of a personal shopper experience, and then there are times where I've been grunted at and largely ignored.
DPD are absolutely fantastic to be honest.
So it's pretty much your fault for not being at home or having someone there to sign for it?
DPD are absolutely fantastic to be honest.