Any company that changes it's name because they were so shit the reputation was shot should be avoided
before last christmas my nephew was working at Evri Hub, seem to remember a figure of 300,000 parcels go missing, a week, a month I forget exactly without asking him again but it was mad
Evri does not report losing 300,000 parcels in a single incident; however, the company admits to losing approximately
eight million packages annually. This figure represents about 1% of the 800 million parcels they project for delivery each year
Oh well 1% is fine then if that's even true figure
Evri admits it will fail to deliver 22,000 UK parcels EVERY day
Following a legal complaint, the article has been amended since publication to clarify that the figure of 22,000 represents parcels which Evri predicts will fail to be delivered on time, as opposed to parcels which will never be delivered, and say that the majority of delayed parcels reach their intended recipients. We apologise for any misunderstanding.
Dubbed Britain's 'worst' courier, delivery company Evri has promptly admitted that it will lose eight million packages this year, despite only being two months in.
Of initially missing parcels, some will eventually make their way to their rightful owners after a delay but others will never arrive due to being stolen or damaged.
The parcel giant estimates it will be responsible for some 800 million packages in 2025, and predicts losing track of one per cent of them.
And while that figure seems relatively harmless, it amounts to 153,846 lost parcels every week and a staggering 22,000 lost parcels every day.
Professor David Edmundson-Bird of Manchester Metropolitan University told The Sun that when businesses expand too quickly without proper adjustments, customer service is often the first soldier to fall.
And with Evri expecting 70 million more parcels than in 2024, when it delivered roughly 730 million, the potential effect on customer service has come into question.
However, the ever-growing courier counts late or lost parcels in the same category to form that one per cent.
A recent £32million investment funneled into the company's operations and customer services department is behind the 99 per cent success rate, it claims.
before last christmas my nephew was working at Evri Hub, seem to remember a figure of 300,000 parcels go missing, a week, a month I forget exactly without asking him again but it was mad
Evri does not report losing 300,000 parcels in a single incident; however, the company admits to losing approximately
eight million packages annually. This figure represents about 1% of the 800 million parcels they project for delivery each year
Oh well 1% is fine then if that's even true figure
Evri admits it will fail to deliver 22,000 UK parcels EVERY day
Following a legal complaint, the article has been amended since publication to clarify that the figure of 22,000 represents parcels which Evri predicts will fail to be delivered on time, as opposed to parcels which will never be delivered, and say that the majority of delayed parcels reach their intended recipients. We apologise for any misunderstanding.
Dubbed Britain's 'worst' courier, delivery company Evri has promptly admitted that it will lose eight million packages this year, despite only being two months in.
Of initially missing parcels, some will eventually make their way to their rightful owners after a delay but others will never arrive due to being stolen or damaged.
The parcel giant estimates it will be responsible for some 800 million packages in 2025, and predicts losing track of one per cent of them.
And while that figure seems relatively harmless, it amounts to 153,846 lost parcels every week and a staggering 22,000 lost parcels every day.
Professor David Edmundson-Bird of Manchester Metropolitan University told The Sun that when businesses expand too quickly without proper adjustments, customer service is often the first soldier to fall.
And with Evri expecting 70 million more parcels than in 2024, when it delivered roughly 730 million, the potential effect on customer service has come into question.
However, the ever-growing courier counts late or lost parcels in the same category to form that one per cent.
A recent £32million investment funneled into the company's operations and customer services department is behind the 99 per cent success rate, it claims.
