Dayton Daily News

CRUNCH TIME HERE

Delivery services ready, but earlier is always better.

- By Holly Shively Staff Writer

Delivery companies are warning shoppers to send holiday gifts and make online purchases within

the next 10 days as a record number of packages are expected to be delivered.

The United States Postal Ser-

vice, United Parcel Service and FedEx have taken extra steps to

ensure timely delivery of billions of packages this holiday season, including adding staff, infrastruc­ture and pop-up locations.

“This is our season. We’ve been doing it for more than 240 years so we’re prepared. We prepare all year long,” said Karen Oberk-

rom, Dayton-area customer rela

tion coordinato­r with USPS. USPS expects to deliver more than 16 billion pieces of mail during the holidays, including 900 million packages. To handle the influx, it has expanded retail hours, added 8,000 new vehicles

to its fleet, expanded operationa­l capacity with new equipment, hired seasonal staff and enhanced package processing systems to handle 25,000 packages per hour.

Retailers and delivery companies have done a decent job of preparing for a major peak in package delivery this year, said Wright State University supply chain and logistics professor James Hamister. The increase in package carrying started around Thanksgivi­ng, but delivery companies will continue to be in their peak season until the beginning of next year.

“I would always try to do it as early as you can make your decision because you improve your odds no matter what . ... There’s a very consolidat­ed, very high level of demand at a time when weather can be pretty challengin­g,” he said.

About 15 to 23 percent of packages are usually delayed during the holidays, said Sri Sridhar, CEO of lateshipme­nt.com, one of the largest independen­t trackers of packages. This holiday season, even express shipments could see a jump in delays to 14 or 15 percent as retailers add free two-day shipping to stay competitiv­e in delivery wars.

“Ship early. I can’t say that enough,” Oberkrom said. “If you absolutely are one of those people who procrastin­ates and waits to the last minute, we do have express mail service available,” Oberkrom said.

General shipping deadlines start as early as Dec. 14. For mailers in a bind, there are some same-day shipments through FedEx and UPS that can get packages to their destinatio­ns on Christmas Day. Gift-givers who don’t want to pay extra for express shipping should plan to mail their packages by early next week.

To avoid major crowds lining up at the three major delivery companies, experts say to avoid the week of Dec. 17 through 21. Oberkrom said USPS expects more than 8 million customers to go to their local post office on Dec. 17 alone, the busiest day of the season.

To ensure packages don’t get lost or damaged, FedEx spokesman Jonathan Lyons recommends filling hollow spaces with cushioning wrap, making sure all boxes aren’t damaged from previous shipping, adding an extra shipping label inside the box in case weather smears the outside, printing labels clearly and sealing all flaps and seams with packing tape in the shape of an H.

Shoppers ordering last-minute Christmas gifts online should do so earlier as well, said retail analyst Brittain Ladd.

“The easier technology makes it for consumers to shop, the sooner, the earliercon­sumers really need to be willing to pick the gifts, order their gifts and be willing to accept the gifts . ... If they don’t do that, they just jeopardize­d being able to have the products they want delivered in time for Christmas,” Ladd said.

Already this holiday season consumers took to Twitter with complaints that free two-day delivery through Amazon, Target and Walmart wasn’t what it seemed.

Both Amazon and Target responded to frustrated customers on social media, saying two-day shipping refers to the time an order takes once it’s in the package carrier’s hands to the time it arrives at its destinatio­n. The two days does not include additional processing time.

 ??  ?? UPS, FedEx and the U.S. Postal Service are expecting a record number of packages this year, with USPS alone processing 25,000 packages per hour and 900 million packages overall.
UPS, FedEx and the U.S. Postal Service are expecting a record number of packages this year, with USPS alone processing 25,000 packages per hour and 900 million packages overall.
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