05-07-2020 02:36 AM
There is a item i sell, it's a small plastic item. I've sold about 100 of them so far. I recently had a customer let me know his item arrived broken/damaged. He sent me pictures. I believe him.
I package them all exactly the same way. The item gets wrapped in newspaper to provide some cushioning. Then shipped in a padded envelope.
So far only 1 out of 100 has been reported damaged. That's a 1% damage rate. I'm trying to decide if i should start packing/shipping them in a box instead of a padded envelope. Of course my cost would go up a bit. Or is a 1% damage rate acceptable?
05-07-2020 08:00 AM
inhawaii - you work in a hardware type of store - don't they get any merchandise that comes wrapped in bubble pack? it is much more protective and much lighter weight than newspaper, and you would help them by recycling something the store owner has to pay to get rid of. But a 1% damage rate - that would not bother me, as it probably wouldn't even be that high over time. I just sent out a tightly packed 6 x 6 x 6 box that the post office must have run over, because it arrived to the buyer completely flattened. 😠
05-07-2020 08:06 AM - edited 05-07-2020 08:09 AM
How much you have to increase your price depends on your profitability.
If it's a $10 item and your profit is 10%, then you made $100 when you sold 100, but you lost $10 when one arrived damaged.
If you only increased the price by 1%, then you increased the price by $1 on the hundred sales but lost $10.
Also, you don't know that only one was damaged. You only know that one buyer complained so that is the minimum damage rate. There may be other buyers who received the damaged item, shrugged and threw it in the trash, and now shop elsewhere.
05-07-2020 08:11 AM
05-07-2020 08:12 AM
calculate which costs more: the box or the 1% damage. Even in a box there might be some damage.
05-07-2020 08:30 AM
Realistically, we will never get to zero % damaged items, it happens. But, for a few pennies extra expense or lost profit, it seems worthwhile to have some extra packaging material in the package when a customer opens it rather it is damaged or not. Better customer service.
05-08-2020 10:50 AM
05-08-2020 01:46 PM
In Canada if you bulk buy small boxes, you can get 100 for $0.50 to $1 per box (in CAD funds).
With the small boxes I put them inside a poly mailer or bubble mailer since the box is too small to ship like that.
The Canadian supply company for good discount stuff is called Uline. You probably have a USA equivalent that can ship a giant box of boxes to you.
C.
05-08-2020 02:28 PM
@sin-n-dex wrote:In Canada if you bulk buy small boxes, you can get 100 for $0.50 to $1 per box (in CAD funds).
With the small boxes I put them inside a poly mailer or bubble mailer since the box is too small to ship like that.
The Canadian supply company for good discount stuff is called Uline. You probably have a USA equivalent that can ship a giant box of boxes to you.
C.
Living in Hawaii can have disadvantages. Noobody will ship me cardnoard boxes, well, they will but for outrageous prices. Uline wants $200-something to ship me 50 small boxes to me. Ebay shipping supplies is the only place i've found that will ship me cardboard boxes for free.
05-08-2020 03:05 PM
Take a look at "the boxery". I buy boxes from them via eBay. Shipping is free....can't say that applies to Hawaii.
05-08-2020 03:09 PM
I've had a box of books damaged - tire marks on the box. No matter how well an item is packaged there is always a chance it can be damaged in transit.
05-08-2020 03:23 PM - edited 05-08-2020 03:26 PM
and write Do Not Crush on the outside of manilla envelope.
Who do you think reads your note?
It's not that the postal workers don't care, or that they "play football" with packages marked fragile, it's that they are too busy tossing fallen items back on the conveyor belts.
Once out of your post office, your packages may not be touched by hands again until they reach the post office near you where your carrier picks up her day's work.
05-08-2020 03:30 PM
If online suppliers are charging you $200 for shipping, check out suppliers on your island.
They are buying in greater quantities than you are, and getting better shipping rates.
BTW- some of us Canadians have done well shipping to Hawai'i and Alaska, because we just pay the USA rate with no distance premium. This may have changed lately (I don't do a lot of parcel shipping), but check out ULine anyway. I used them a lot when I had a shop and later before eBay started offering "free" shipping supplies.
Research before decision.
05-08-2020 03:48 PM
I was talking about that with a postal worker. He laughs at "fragile" or "do not crush" labels.
"I was going to smash the BLEEP out of this package, but then i saw "fragile" on it and decided to gently set it down"
LOL
05-08-2020 03:52 PM
In many cases a padded mailer is not enough to protect some items. This is why I wrap every game and movie in bubble wrap besides the bubble mailer itself. It does raise costs, but not by much. I bought 350 ft of bubble wrap for $18, and went thru one entire roll this past month, but it was over $1,000 in sales, so the cost is irrelevant really.
05-08-2020 04:30 PM
@inhawaii wrote:
@sin-n-dex wrote:In Canada if you bulk buy small boxes, you can get 100 for $0.50 to $1 per box (in CAD funds).
With the small boxes I put them inside a poly mailer or bubble mailer since the box is too small to ship like that.
The Canadian supply company for good discount stuff is called Uline. You probably have a USA equivalent that can ship a giant box of boxes to you.
C.
Living in Hawaii can have disadvantages. Noobody will ship me cardnoard boxes, well, they will but for outrageous prices. Uline wants $200-something to ship me 50 small boxes to me. Ebay shipping supplies is the only place i've found that will ship me cardboard boxes for free.
Try finding a service that uses a flat rate of postage. When I shop online, I see all kinds of boasting of low shipping rates and free shipping.
You might end up paying more for each box, but you should be able to find somewhere online.
C.