Package Has Disappeared in USPS System


I recently purchased a modestly expensive audio product over the Internet, paid for by credit card, to be shipped to me via the USPS Priority Mail system, with tracking and insurance.  The vendor, who will go unnamed at the moment out of respect for past good service, emailed me that the package shipped on 20 December, although the package did not show up in the USPS system until about 27 December.  Being a patient guy, I figured that the USPS is slow in keeping up with demand over Christmas.  On about 28 December, the USPS tracking system said the package had been received, had been sent to a regional distribution center, and had been shipped on from there.  However, and now it gets "interesting,"  on 31 December, the USPS tracking system said that the label had been created but that the package was not in the system.  In other words, the package had "disappeared" from the USPS system.  At several points in this saga, I contacted the vendor to express my concern, especially after the package disappeared from the USPS system; their response was that I should be patient and await further developments..

On 2 January,I contact the vendor, suggesting they initiate a missing package complaint, file an insurance claim, and requested that they send me a replacement product, assuring them that I would promptly return the first item if it ever showed up. (Coincidentally, on the same date I read a reputably-sourced news item about rampant theft by employees in the USPS system--hardly reassuring.)

The vendor's response again was that I should be patient--in spite of my pointing out that the USPS had obviously lost the package--and await further developments.

However, in spite of normally being a very patient guy, I think, with two weeks having passed and the USPS tracking system now saying they haven't received the package that they previously acknowledged having, it is time for the vendor to send me a replacement item.

I will never use the USPS system for product shipment if there is any other viable alternative.

Several questions come to mind:

1) How long is reasonable to wait for a package that should have been delivered in one to three days?

2)  At what point should a vendor realize that good customer service means providing the customer with a product they shipped with tracking and insurance?

3)  Would it unreasonable for me to tell the vendor that if they cannot provide a replacement product within a few days, I would like my money refunded?  (I am prepared to contest the charge on my credit card for non-performance.

4)  Am I being unreasonable?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 









































 

mike4597

@tony1954 Why the hate for UPS? I continually have had trouble with getting things delivered in undamaged condition. The boxes look like they were given to a gorilla with a baseball bat hellbent on destroying the item inside. This is an over the top problem with them. I get hundreds of items a year sent to me via UPS due to frequent amazon purchases, fully 25% if not more have shipping carton damage. Sometimes the product inside is ok and sometimes it isn't but if the stuff inside the box is ok its not because it was handled reasonably. Then there is always a hassle with getting the damaged thing picked up, the call to customer service that takes my time because they cannot do an effective job of handling items with care. I'm so fed up with those clowns I don't know where to start. That said, FedEx has never messed up a shipment to me yet....granted there have been fewer shipments to screw up because everybody ships thru stinky brown boys I think mostly because of cost, certainly not because of their handling methods.

So I’m very curious how so many of you here have had very bad luck with items getting lost and or damaged. Very curious. 450 shipments and counting, although my days of buying and selling are very limited these days.

I always overpack my shipments, but there’s not much that will protect an 80lb speaker that drops 15’ from a conveyor belt, or the intentional damage that FedEx and UPS drivers have been known to inflict out of spite.

Statistically, some people will invariably have better luck than others when it comes to this stuff. It’s not unlike the luck of being born in a developed western nation vs being born into poverty in sub-saharan Africa.

The most likely reason you’ve never had to file a claim for one of those guitars IS the fact they are lightweight. It’s basic physics—the greater the mass, the greater the energy, the greater the resulting force when dropped/kicked/thrown from a given height. Most guitars are remarkably robust considering their total mass. Speakers have a far lower mass/strength ratio in most cases.

 

Did you call the local USPS center? We sold an inexpensive item recently which showed delivered on their automated system. I called the location in NC (closest to the buyer) and they resolved the situation in 1 day. The item was delivered to the wrong address. It was retrieved by the local carrier and delivered to the buyer. 
The seller should take the initiative and call. 

The assumption, implied by those who intend never to use USPS again, that private couriers like UPS and FedEx are more reliable than USPS is not borne out by my experience. I never have had problems with delivery of the many hundreds of packages I’ve sent and received through USPS, either coming or going. However, I had a horribly damaged package arrive through FedEx and several packages lost, perhaps stolen, by UPS employees en route to their destination. I have no intention to discontinue use of those couriers, because crap happens. It’s frustrating, but it’s a part of life. I will, however, continue using USPS as my go to courier service, at least until DeJoy has his way with the system. The postal system is especially important to rural America. I have several friends who live in remote areas where USPS is the only courier that will deliver. So, we all should support it whenever we can.