And as for the "monkey's can run these routes" phrase, wow, i thought they only said that in our center!!! Actually they said, monkeys can load the trucks.
One day my center manager calls me to his office, they have a rookie pulling a route with some IE guy ( no sups were available ) and they were totally messed up. I was told to go pull 20-30 stops off them ( I'm an air driver ). I found them an hour later, at 2pm they still haven't emptied one spot on the car. And they had missed some pick ups. I took a couple of bulk stops, just enough to free up the floor. Told them what to do and how to do it, did the stops I took & informed some along the route that they would be running very late that day.
Its a very sad place to work if mgt uses air drivers as trainers.
I agree. I don't mind working 10 hours but leaving at 8:50 or 9 is not acceptable. The city I deliver in is 1/2 an hour away. By the time I get there Fedex Ground has 30 stops off. Iv'e brought this up but no one cares. Starting late kills your morning and your evening.
My first supervisor was truly an amazing delivery person. If you told him an address, he could tell you the color of the house, the side of the street it was on and the number of stairs to the front door. He could also tell you if the customer had a dog, if the dog would bite and if it did, how many teeth it had.Pollock, knowing the streets and knowing the delivery route are two entirely different things. Number breaks, delivery points, traffic flow, etc., are just the tip of what you will need to know to say that you know a delivery route. But, that being said, knowing the streets does give you a big advantage over someone using a map. Good luck!!
My first supervisor was truly an amazing delivery person. If you told him an address, he could tell you the color of the house, the side of the street it was on and the number of stairs to the front door. He could also tell you if the customer had a dog, if the dog would bite and if it did, how many teeth it had.![]()