Citibox Secure Mailboxes and International Courier

English
Español
Discount Courier Parcels via FedEx

Archive for January, 2012

Three Customs problems with sending courier shipments to the USA from Spain

Monday, January 30th, 2012

It seems that the United States of America Customs are getting even tougher over imports now than they were after 9/11.  But this is not terrorist related, it is not to do with the “war on terror” it is just what the rest of the world calls “red tape”.  It is penalising ordinary citizens sending courier parcels from Spain to the USA.

Any food or drink or medicine product requires prior approval by the FDA.  You try to figure it out, I can do it but it takes me a minimum of 30 minutes for a new customer and a new product.  You can see the procedure here FDA Form . Send a cup-cake to your auntie in Vermont and complete the form; a bottle of Spanish Cava to your uncle in Montana and complete the form; a small bag of Spanish almonds from our own organic trees outside our house and complete the form.

Any video product to the USA requires a declaration that it is not pornographic etc.  So be careful when you send the grandparents in Florida a nice DVD showing your children in Spain playing in their paddling pool and fill out this form Video Form .  OK, child pornography is disgusting and should be banned from every country.  Ordinary pornography, disgusting as it may be, is freely available over the internet Wikipedia Porn and I hardly think it requires an individual declaration that a video recording does not contain it.

Any radio equipment requires a courier declaration of compliance with the FCC, the Federal Communications Commission which wants to know whether you are going to unleash a death-ray on the good citizens of the USA.  You will need to complete this form FCC Form to prove that the router or bluetooth device you are sending is not going to infringe Federal Regulations.  As though the manufacturer in Taiwan, Japan or China has not already gone to great lengths to ensure this so they have access to the World’s largest market.  And is there a product available in the EU that does not also comply with the (less stringent) Federal regulations?

So, is this a trade war in disguise?  Was it initiated against the Chinese rather than Europeans? It certainly increases the cost of most courier parcels from Europe to the USA.

Italian truck strike affects courier parcel deliveries from Spain

Friday, January 27th, 2012

This is the formal warning from FedEx:

Truck’s transportation companies declared 5 days of strike starting as off today. The situation will become more and more critical since all main highways (A1-A4-A7) are blocked by demonstrations. Volume destined to non direct served area are going to miss commitment.

The courier service from Spain to Italy, always pretty indifferent, is going to be non-existant for a while.  See it here http://www.ifw-net.com/freightpubs/ifw/index/italian-truckers-on-strike/20017934329.htm

What it means for Italy is lost exports, bare supermarket shelves and a load of misery just when they have a non-partisan government trying to sort out their dire economy.  What it means for urgent courier deliveries to Italy from Spain or to courier from Italy worldwide is, outside of Rome and Milan, forget your courier package getting through.

Really, Italy vexes me more than most European countries.  We have a disproportionate problem sending items to Italy, suitcases to Greece are way easier.  Courier to Benelux or Ireland almost never fails. Courier to Germany or France has just the occasional problem.  Italian courier packages have so many problems and not just due to the current road strike, it really seems, as I told one customer today, that they just don’t want to get out of bed in the morning.

An on-line survey of the benefits of using FedEx as a Parcel Courier to and from Spain

Thursday, January 19th, 2012

I have just spent half an hour on a “10 minute” on-line satisfaction survey sent to me by some company reporting to FedEx.  Despite the recent youtube videos FedEx Driver showing how the delivery man mis-treats your parcels, an awful lot gets through without package damage or loss.  But not all, and this success rate really differs among the various carriers.

At the end it all is down to the individual who delivers your courier letter, parcel or package, in Spain or abroad.  We have wonderful messengers in Marbella who take the greatest of care and we have really unprofessional drivers who kick the packages down our stairs and complain when we have too many parcels for them to collect.

So, why do we use FedEx?  Simply because, although not quite as good as UPS they are far cheaper for small Economy deliveries.  Why don’t we use TNT or DHL?  We physically don’t have the number of staff to cope with the problems that they would give us.

What really is the rate of parcels going missing or damaged?  Couriered letters almost never go missing, I don’t think I can remember a single incident.  Couriered parcels do get lost, they do get damaged and they can be held up in customs or they can be undeliverable.

Let’s look at all these cases.  Lost parcels or lost luggage sent by courier companies.  It is easy to see whether a tracked parcel has been lost.  Most of them turn up eventually but some don’t.  If they don’t they have either been stolen or their air waybill has fallen off.  I recently left a camera tripod in Istanbul (Turkey) airport and, returning to collect it, I was amazed at the sheer volume of lost luggage.  If it is like this in a single airport, imagine what it is like for a global courier organisation, there must be thousands of tonnes of parcels sitting in warehouses around the world.  If they have been stolen, and it does happen, there is nothing you can do but claim on the insurance which always pays out for genuine claims.  If they have been lost, a really good description of the package can result in a find but, if not, the insurance will pay out.  I estimate that fewer than one in 10,000 packages goes permanently missing.

Damage is more likely than a parcel going missing.  However, if a parcel is correctly packaged it is very hard to damage.  We recently sold a collection of porcelain plates on eBay and this resulted in around five parcels to the UK and USA.  You can see here How to pack a Parcel that we pack so that any parcel can withstand a drop of 1.5 metres.   However, what if you are buying from someone else who does not necessarily pack properly?  We recently bought four lampshades on eBay and they arrived all broken because the box was not really up to the job.  Will we get our claim through?  I don’t know but we’ll try.  How should they have been packed?  Imagine that another box weighing 70kg could be stacked on top of yours and that it may have a sharp and rigid corner angle which can make a dent in the outer carton of your property.  The only way to ensure that your goods will arrive unharmed is to insulate them from the outside of the box to make sure an external blow will not reach the contents; to ensure that the contents cannot move within the box by packing them with adequate packaging material of which crumpled newspaper is an excellent example and to make the box crush-proof by using a really heavy grade cardboard and supporting the box with a material such as expanded polystyrene or, even better, the polyurethane foam sold in builders merchants.  If you wrap your product in cling film and place it onto a sheet of cling film on a layer of the foam before putting another layer of cling film on top and filling the rest of the box with foam you have a purpose-made unique moulded cocoon for the most delicate of contents.

Customs Agencies vary from country to country.  Some are relatively easy to pass, some are really difficult.  If you are sending artwork out of Spain you have to clear customs on the way out and convince them you are not smuggling out a valuable national treasure.  If you have food or drink going to or transiting the USA you need to fill out a FDA prior notice form which, if you do loads like I do, only takes 20 minutes for each package!  If you are sending certain items to the UK such as alcohol or tobacco you have to pre-pay the import duty.  If you send electronic goods (like a game console) to Argentina the recipient has to go to Buenos Aires customs themselves to clear the item and pay the import duty.  Spain does not allow medicines to be imported, not even herbal ones.  There is too much specialised information to give in this section but the main point is that while your package is in Customs is is effectively out of the hands of the courier and in the hands of the Government and no recompense will be paid for any loss or damage or delay by any courier company.  It doesn’t happen often but it can happen UK Customs Success.

Lastly, the package can be undeliverable.  This may mean that the address is incorrect; the recipient is not answering their telephone; it is destined for a post office box to which, in most countries outside the Middle East and Africa,  couriers cannot deliver (use the postal service); the recipient has moved, is on holiday or the business has closed.  Or the courier can’t be bothered to find the address!  There are normally three attempts at delivery, if these fail the package will be returned to sender.  This is a really serious situation because courier inbound to Spain normally costs far more than the original courier charge for the outbound parcel from Spain so the parcel is returned with a charge for the outward shipment and a larger charge for the inward shipment, there can be customs problems on entry and the returned parcel service will probably be Express as opposed to Economy which further increases the cost.  Sometimes you have the option for the parcel to be destroyed instead (meaning they get to open it and pocket anything worth keeping).

Thank goodness that these problems occur so infrequently that we can sleep most nights but when they do occur ……..!

 

TNT and DHL change their terms for discount courier to Spain: Stick with Citibox and FedEx / UPS

Monday, January 2nd, 2012

Happy New Year to you all.  A very interesting email arrived with me over the holidays entitled “Important information regarding DHL-EU and TNT Services” from a company called PayPerParcel apparantly DHL and TNT are “pulling” their discount courier services from the UK to Spain and parcels to national and international destinations, forcing the discount courier brokers to charge full rate so that they do not compete with the supplier company.  All the more reason to stick with Citibox!

This is the relevent part of the text:

TNT services have been removed from the quick quote. 

DHL-EU services, they have had an internal agreement that all re-sellers must sell at the same DHL price, therefore as you will see from now, the price is heavily increased, we are hoping that this will be only a short term issue and will keep you updated, please also let us know if you find any other reseller selling at a cheaper price for the DHL services as they must be consistent throughout all the resellers from now on.

Citibox has always maintained that it sticks with FedEx and UPS for the superior quality of their parcel service service rather than the cut-throat courier prices that TNT and DHL have been offering.  But it seems that the (slightly) lower prices of the latter two have had such an impact on their margins that they have been forced to insist that their agents charge full price to the public.  This should bring a welcome increase to Citibox for exports and imports to and from the UK and Spain.  What a Happy New Year!

 

Get the cheapest price for deliveries to and from Spain:

Get an Instant Quote
 

Citibox - Cheapest in Spain for deliveries!

Book Shipping Now!
 

Where's my parcel?

Track Your Parcel
 

Register with us and SAVE! Get your money off voucher now!

Register Now

Enter your Email Address and we'll send your €5 voucher

Register
 

Stay Connected -

Citibox on Twitter Citibox on LinkedIn Citibox on Facebook The Citibox YouTube Channel Subscribe to the Citibox RSS Feed