Try putting a plain bar code label on the bottom left corner of every envelope.

To the untrained eye it looks like some form of tracking.

 

We started doing this about 5-years ago now.

Before we did this we were getting "item has not arrived" messages at the rate of about 1 in every 100 envelopes we sent out.

Immediately after putting the labels on it dropped down to about 1 in 1,000 where it remains to this day.

 

I don't think its the delivery system failing you, it's the scammers who will try to get under $10 items for nothing.

 

Try it... I know of other sellers who have and it works with about the same results.

That's why it's worth using the new trackable envelopes from Aust Post.     They actually work out a bit cheaper than the 500g postage rate, and show tracking dates.

The labels I print up myself cost about 1.5 cents each.

And they achieve the same end result (put off the would-be scammers) as the trackable envelopes that cost a whole lot more.

 

There is no claim on the labels that they are Aust Post tracking, just a plain vanilla barcode that coud be our own internal product tracking code of some kind. It's the perception that's everything.

at the risk of seeming stubborn - they can't possibly be cheaper if the large envelope attracts the 500g postal rate of  $5

 

As the trackable envelopes only cost $4.90.Smiley Happy

Thanks...I just paid $217.12 for 50 (with a code)

I buy my C5 envelopes for $2.295 each.

 

Significantly less than $4.90.

Dave - these Aust Post envelopes are with  full tracking - useful for large envelope rate that you would normally pay $5 for

 

Of course if the item fits in a C5 envelope that is cheaper, but the whole thread here is about how to cope with buyers who say they have not received their item.

I don't get them so I can't comment on that.

 

But untracked C4s are $4.23 in 10 packs.

 

Prepaid envelopes are generally (unless the item is under 125g) cheaper than paying $3 or $5 postage. Or $4.90 for tracked.

 

I'm constrained in my pricing by what my competitors charge. I'm certainly not open (given a 0.05% INR rate) to reducing my profit by $2.60 per sale for the sake of tracking. Which is my point. Doubling the postage cost, unless it can be added to the price, leaves a lot of scope for self-insuring.


@curraone wrote:

at the risk of seeming stubborn - they can't possibly be cheaper if the large envelope attracts the 500g postal rate of  $5

 

As the trackable envelopes only cost $4.90.Smiley Happy


Not seen as being stubborn at all. So no worries there.

It' more like I'm missing something here.

 

Most of our items go out using large letter rate 2x $1 stamps.

Plus I add on my own printed bar code label (I described above) as a deterrent to what the OP was asking about.

This is where I'm missing something as I can't see how/where I can buy the prepaid tracked envelopes for less than $2.

If there is somewhere I can get them for less I'd love to know.


@clarry100 wrote:

@curraone wrote:

at the risk of seeming stubborn - they can't possibly be cheaper if the large envelope attracts the 500g postal rate of  $5

 

As the trackable envelopes only cost $4.90.Smiley Happy


Not seen as being stubborn at all. So no worries there.

It' more like I'm missing something here.

 

Most of our items go out using large letter rate 2x $1 stamps.

Plus I add on my own printed bar code label (I described above) as a deterrent to what the OP was asking about.

This is where I'm missing something as I can't see how/where I can buy the prepaid tracked envelopes for less than $2.

If there is somewhere I can get them for less I'd love to know.


No clarry,  they won't help you - obviously your items are very light.    The envelopes I'm talking about are for items 250g to 500g that can go as a letter.