A sign of the levels of crime or perhaps level of dishonesty among some drivers?
I purchased Adobe Photoshop CS4 for the Mac Retail from Toolfarm on Tuesday. Coincidentally the price with courier and customs is R3000 less than the cheapest price I could find in SA. The item was despatched and arrived in Johannesburg clearing customs by 3:15pm on Thursday. Online tracking hadn't been updated by this morning so I called FedEx who told me that I had to EFT them the customs charge of R400 odd because their drivers no longer accepted cash, CC or cheque payments - danger of hijacking. I was told someone had tried to phone me since Wednesday but no-one in fact had, for no-one here got a call from FedEx. Anyway I managed to convince FedEx SA to deliver the box
COD at the end. They did get defensive when I told them that the Priority Service was '3 business days time guaranteed' (FedEx Economy is 5-7 days).
Anyway the morale of the story is that crime in SA is of such high proportions that FedEx and it's 300 odd vehicles no longer accept payments of any sort on delivery, you have to pay by EFT first. Crime is either of genuinely high proportions and their couriers get hijacked or there is rampant theft among the drivers. Anyhow the other morale is that you can never trust a local subsidiary of a major company. There was no mention of this new practice which I was told started in June 2008 on their website and the online tracking service did not mention any hiccups - I asked them on the phone to tell the customer to "call FedEx" but that recommendation will no doubt remain with the operator. Thankfully a couple friendly people at FedEx SA did help me out at the end to get the item on time today.
I purchased Adobe Photoshop CS4 for the Mac Retail from Toolfarm on Tuesday. Coincidentally the price with courier and customs is R3000 less than the cheapest price I could find in SA. The item was despatched and arrived in Johannesburg clearing customs by 3:15pm on Thursday. Online tracking hadn't been updated by this morning so I called FedEx who told me that I had to EFT them the customs charge of R400 odd because their drivers no longer accepted cash, CC or cheque payments - danger of hijacking. I was told someone had tried to phone me since Wednesday but no-one in fact had, for no-one here got a call from FedEx. Anyway I managed to convince FedEx SA to deliver the box
COD at the end. They did get defensive when I told them that the Priority Service was '3 business days time guaranteed' (FedEx Economy is 5-7 days).
Anyway the morale of the story is that crime in SA is of such high proportions that FedEx and it's 300 odd vehicles no longer accept payments of any sort on delivery, you have to pay by EFT first. Crime is either of genuinely high proportions and their couriers get hijacked or there is rampant theft among the drivers. Anyhow the other morale is that you can never trust a local subsidiary of a major company. There was no mention of this new practice which I was told started in June 2008 on their website and the online tracking service did not mention any hiccups - I asked them on the phone to tell the customer to "call FedEx" but that recommendation will no doubt remain with the operator. Thankfully a couple friendly people at FedEx SA did help me out at the end to get the item on time today.