![]() From there, that package is brought to a larger UPS center where it ends up getting sifted and sorted into either UPS Ground or UPS Air categories. After that, your package is bundled up with a bunch of other packages from that central hub to be distributed via either ground or air delivery systems. ![]() UPS takes advantage of a similar infrastructure that FedEx uses (as well as a similar structure that the USPS now uses, too), the essential “hub and spoke” network model that makes deliveries a lot more efficient. Your package starts off in the UPS process by getting dropped off at a local UPS store or facility for being picked up by a UPS driver. But somehow they pull it off! At the same time, everyone wants to know when their packages are going to arrive – not just the day it’s going to show up, but (at the very least) a ballpark time of the day that it will arrive, too. Most shipping companies just don’t have the ability to drill down to that kind of granular level when it comes to giving you a delivery estimate. UPS, on the other hand, has found a way to make that possible. We dig a little deeper into that below!īetter Understanding the UPS Delivery Process With all those packages zooming around at once it’s a miracle that UPS is able to deliver anything as quickly, as efficiently, and as consistently as they are able to. United Parcel Services (best known as UPS) was first created over 100 years ago – all the way back in August 1907 – and has established itself as one of the most popular shipping and delivery services, not just in the United States but around the world as well. Especially popular with online merchants and e-commerce operations, UPS is a shipping partner of choice for millions and millions of business owners across the country – sending 24 million packages every day all over the world.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |