How to get your freight delivered on time

Imagine a day where you are not dealing with late delivery complaints.

For us that is every day.

boxes for Freight delivery

Sick of late freight?

As providers of courier services we know how tough it is to get your freight delivered on time. We are fortunate though – we have a process that we are going to share with you and if you follow these steps your freight will always reach it’s destination intact and when it should.  The day you cease to have customers calling about late deliveries is now a few steps closer.

1. When a customer wants a delivery double check their location details

Sometimes a customer calls from one location (that you have on your database) but they want their pallets delivered to a different destination. They don’t tell you but they do tell the warehouse. This means when you schedule the delivery their isn’t enough time for subsequent deliveries because you are routing to the wrong delivery address. A quick check at the booking stage can save your business hours.

2. Manage your clients delivery expectations from the outset

If your client calls at 8am and want their pallets in Birmingham at 10am that is not a problem providing you are also in Birmingham. However if you are in Edinburgh or London you will not be able to get the pallets to their destination in 3 hours. Not even documents using a motorbike could get delivered in that time frame. If you manage your clients expectations openly and honestly then you will have less phone calls hassling you.

3. When outsourcing to a courier service check that they have all the customer details…

… and that those details are correct. Email the courier the correct delivery addresses, phone numbers and details of service areas (especially if they haven’t delivered for you before). If there are issues parking at the delivery destination tell them now. The better prepared they are the more likely they are to be on time with your consignments.

4. Named contacts

Inform your courier service of the person ordering the job at collection and delivery points. If the job is a “special” or “screamer” then sometimes the general warehouse staff are not aware of it. Make the loading and unloading process faster by providing points of contact with phone numbers. A good courier company will ask for these at the time of booking.

5. Documentation

Most hold-ups at collection points involve the documents travelling with your freight. Call the warehouse and prepare them in advance for urgent collections and make the office staff aware of that days deliveries and who is collecting them. Without the correct documents a warehouse won’t release the freight and this will make the delivery late. A few minutes here can save you an hour and you avoid paying waiting time.

If you run through the 5 steps every time you outsource a delivery you will rarely have a problem getting your freight delivered on time.

Sarah

Let’s talk about cancelling your delivery

Croquembouch wedding cake
Image via Wikipedia

The snow has made things hard for us same day couriers, we have to complete the same distances but use more fuel and more man hours to deliver things “as normal”.

We go above and beyond normal duty to see items get delivered. For example On Saturday we delivered a wedding cake to Birmingham from London. The booking was made a week ago and I left the house at 5am to reach London for 7am.

The wedding cake had to be delivered by 2pm to the venue. Our client confirmed this, and I left London at 7.10 am and drive up to Birmingham, through the snow, through the ice, through a blizzard.

Non stop, well sort of, at one point I travelled 20 miles at 11 miles per hour. The roads were treacherous and there were plenty of stay at home warnings and only travel if you have to warnings.

I reached Birmingham at 2.01 pm

I found a deserted venue.

No one was there to sign for the cake, the roads were clear and there were no cars in the car park.

I called my client, who called their client who promptly told them that they were glad they called as they rang 30 minutes ago to cancel the delivery as they had decided to cancel the wedding a few days ago…

Communication is the key to all deliveries. From getting the right vehicle, to the correctly trained driver to the correct delivery address, communication is the vital component to making a delivery success.

Cancelling a delivery isn’t always possible at short notice, you a still liable for it once the collection has taken place.

If you are on the receiving end of a delivery think carefully about how long it takes  for the item to reach you. You cannot cancel a delivery that is 6.5 hours into a 7 hour journey. Fuel and man hours still have to be paid.

You can cancel a delivery with notice, in the case this customer they knew a few days ago that the wedding wasn’t taking place. They should have informed everyone in the chain, including the delivery drivers.

As I pulled out of the venue car park, another van was pulling in. The driver wound down the window and we had a quick chat – he wanted to know where to go to get the disco gear signed for… another delivery not cancelled in time it seems.

It works out to be very expensive for everyone involved.

Remember when booking your deliveries to read the T&Cs

Kevin

Same day courier services

Enhanced by Zemanta

Summer of delivery hell?

RMT have announced two days of industrial action

The Rail Maritime and Transport union said its members working on Tube Lines contracts will walk out from 7pm on June 23 and again from 7pm on July 14.

LONDON, ENGLAND - JUNE 10:  Piccadilly line un...
Image by Getty Images via @daylife

This particularly affects the Piccadilly, Northern and Jubilee lines. As usual when a strike takes place there will be severe disruption.

Why does this equate to a summer of delivery hell? London is busy enough as it is, and more cars and increased public transport such as buses will make these days busier.

Solutions to drivers sitting for hours in slow moving traffic include to simply deliver out of peak hours. when a tube strike happens, peak hours fly out of the window. Commuters often consider working from home on those days, some companies hire coaches to bring their staff in and others drive. So it’s not total bedlam, but it feels that way when your normal working routine is disrupted. It’s disrupted for all of us, those that work in London and those that deliver into London.

When you carry out deliveries, you need to factor in traffic to get to your destination and Tube Strikes increase the traffic, also there is a surge of bookings for most courier services, so if you plan on using a courier those days, book them in advance.

Sarah

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Wanted: Vancouver based courier companies – pls RT

If you are a courier company based in Vancouver, would you like to meet for coffee?

My wife and I will be over for the opening of the Olympic Games. In 2012 we have the Olympic games coming to London, and if you have the time, we would love to meet you and talk about business, in particular if yours has benefited from the Olympics being held locally.

The Olympic Flag flying in Victoria, British C...
Image via Wikipedia

The Olympics is the biggest non war related movement of people across the globe, and we are thrilled to be coming to your city to see them.

We would also like to meet local couriers (and my wife would love to video you for an interview on this blog, but I can take the batteries from the Flip ;-) ) and talk about the challenges in order to understand them and to prepare our own business.

Also too exchange best practise, ideas (we are continents apart, so look at things differently – I bet a little bit of snow doesn’t bring your business to a standstill)  and legislation. We are green and ethical in our business outlook and it would be pleasant to meet similar minded people.

So, if you are a courier company in Vancouver, please drop us a line in the comments or email sarah@arrowlighthaulage.co.uk and we can schedule a coffee.

regards

Kevin

Enhanced by Zemanta

Guest Blog: What to do if you get a ticket whilst loading

Part three of our guest blog by Nick Parkin from the Pimlico Flats blog and community (you know where to go if you need to rent a property in London, Nick knows all the ins and outs!)

The courier unloading
Image by Ange Soleil ( a.k.a Tweng ) via Flickr

3. What to do if you get a ticket whilst loading / unloading in London

  • If a parking attendant or traffic warden finds a vehicle parked on a yellow line without seeing any loading or unloading taking place a parking ticket will be issued. It is for the driver of that vehicle to demonstrate that he or she was loading or unloading, the shorter the observation period of the parking attendant or traffic warden the easier it will be for the motorist to claim that an exemption applies
  • It is reasonable to expect that deliveries of smaller items should take less time than those of larger items and hence there would be a greater burden on the driver to justify a lengthy absence from the vehicle. Drivers making a delivery in the course of a trade or business will, in the majority of cases, be able to produce some form of documentation in the event of a ticket being issued.
  • Get witnesses – I once received a ticket from a Westminster Council Warden, and quoted a Police Traffic Warden as my witness against the ticket, WCC kindly reversed the fine.

Nick Parkin M.A., C.Eng., M.I.Mech.E., Dip.Man.Tech.

Proprietor

Pimlico Flats

Office:    0207 630 5408

Thanks Nick, much appreciated.

If you would like to post a guest blog, please get in touch with Sarah – sarah@arrowlighthaulage.co.uk

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]