Now more than ever, people are ordering important packages online. As social distancing measures continue, the need for delivery has skyrocketed. Maybe you order food for your pantry or crucial medicine, or even just a birthday present sent to a family member you can't visit. Whatever you order, you expect it to arrive safely and securely.
When you received your package, was it damaged, or worse, never made it to your house? We’ve all experienced the moment a box that should have been handled with care is ruined with damaged product. But what if all it took to prevent any destruction was a little more attention to detail and a few less crossed fingers?
Think of your favorite pasta sauce. After it gets made and put into individual jars, those bottles get packaged and put on a pallet. There’s probably some stretch wrap involved, maybe even some corrugate. They pack up a truck headed to your grocery store so you can enjoy your delicious treat.
But wait! The truck hits a pothole on the way to the store and shows up with a truck full of spilled sauce and broken glass. The manufacturer loses money on that damaged product; the grocery store is angry it can’t sell you your sauce, and you have to go home and eat plain spaghetti noodles.
One wrong bump in the road can cause a lot of trouble. Fortunately, it may have a fairly simple solution.
There are three important components to creating a safe ride for products. If you get all three of them right, you can skip the insurance paperwork, uncross your fingers and still rest easy.
So next time you enjoy a spaghetti dinner, think of the risk that jar took to get to you. Think of the grocery store who was pleased to see everything in their inventory survived the trip. Finally, think of the manufacturer, who mastered not only the recipe for the perfect sauce, but the recipe for a perfect unit load.