Is it a large business? If so, it could be getting rejected at the corporate mail room; some corporations don't allow personal mail or phone calls. Just a thought.
Cheers,
Peter
At the last company I worked for the so called " Mail boys" would steal every piece of mail that looked like a card. They where caught but not until camera's and Mail bait was used. They were both fired and I believe prosecuted.
Thanks guys,
It is his company and the mail is delivered to a PO Box so I am thinking it is a problem somewhere in the chain of the letters getting there.
Thanks,
Alyn
My suggestion is to address the card to the company, and then in the bottom left corner of the envelope, write "Attention: name of your brother". If it doesn't get delivered then, have your brother check his mail room.
if it's a PO box, the company name is immaterial; the PO will deliver it to the box. The box is the ONLY local identifier needed.
heh heh. Right, Dave. I said it backwards... What I wanted to say was if it is a private box, and you want to add a company name, you have to add it to the application (can be done at any time if you are the box renter). I deleted the incorrect information from my post above.
"Every year I send my brother in law a birthday card to his place of business. ...Problem is he never receives the cards."
Steve, that does seem sensible
"It seems to me that, after several failed attempts, you probably should send the next birthday card to his residence address."
Does your non-card correspondence get delivered?
"Same problem with that address, that is why I started sending to his business. "
"Does your non-card correspondence get delivered?"
What fun! Send two cards, one addressed as usual, and the other addressed as suggested. Let's see what happens!
and, of course, we all assume it's USPS, but could, in fact, be Canada Post.
with minor exceptions, i find mail to/from Canada to be the slowest and most problematic of mail
David
It may not be either postal service at all. It could be US Customs.
"we all assume it's USPS, but could, in fact, be Canada Post."
"It may not be either postal service at all. It could be US Customs."
Not questioning anyone or anything here, but you did check the address right? All it would take is "Road" substituted for "Avenue" for it to get to an incorrect, yet existent, place.
Alyn, one of my books that was sent to a customer in Russia two years ago is still showing as sitting in US Customs in St. Louis. I guess after everyone in US Customs and Homeland Security reads it, they will send it on to Russia. (Maybe they're looking for the secret codes embedded in the text...)
I have a question about mail delivery in the US. Every year I send my brother in law a birthday card to his place of business. The envelope is addressed to him and then the mailing address, I don't fill out a C/O line.
Problem is he never receives the cards. The only thing we can think of is that the mail carrier assumes the mail is being delivered to the wrong place because the business name does not appear on the envelope.
My question is should the mail not get delivered to the address regardless of the name on the envelope. Should he be talking to his local postmaster? If they think the mail is misaddressed should it not be coming back to me as undeliverable?
Any help that you can shed would be great.
Many thanks,
Alyn
re: A question about USPS Delivery
Is it a large business? If so, it could be getting rejected at the corporate mail room; some corporations don't allow personal mail or phone calls. Just a thought.
Cheers,
Peter
re: A question about USPS Delivery
At the last company I worked for the so called " Mail boys" would steal every piece of mail that looked like a card. They where caught but not until camera's and Mail bait was used. They were both fired and I believe prosecuted.
re: A question about USPS Delivery
Thanks guys,
It is his company and the mail is delivered to a PO Box so I am thinking it is a problem somewhere in the chain of the letters getting there.
Thanks,
Alyn
re: A question about USPS Delivery
My suggestion is to address the card to the company, and then in the bottom left corner of the envelope, write "Attention: name of your brother". If it doesn't get delivered then, have your brother check his mail room.
re: A question about USPS Delivery
if it's a PO box, the company name is immaterial; the PO will deliver it to the box. The box is the ONLY local identifier needed.
re: A question about USPS Delivery
heh heh. Right, Dave. I said it backwards... What I wanted to say was if it is a private box, and you want to add a company name, you have to add it to the application (can be done at any time if you are the box renter). I deleted the incorrect information from my post above.
re: A question about USPS Delivery
"Every year I send my brother in law a birthday card to his place of business. ...Problem is he never receives the cards."
re: A question about USPS Delivery
Steve, that does seem sensible
re: A question about USPS Delivery
"It seems to me that, after several failed attempts, you probably should send the next birthday card to his residence address."
re: A question about USPS Delivery
Does your non-card correspondence get delivered?
re: A question about USPS Delivery
"Same problem with that address, that is why I started sending to his business. "
re: A question about USPS Delivery
"Does your non-card correspondence get delivered?"
re: A question about USPS Delivery
What fun! Send two cards, one addressed as usual, and the other addressed as suggested. Let's see what happens!
re: A question about USPS Delivery
and, of course, we all assume it's USPS, but could, in fact, be Canada Post.
with minor exceptions, i find mail to/from Canada to be the slowest and most problematic of mail
David
re: A question about USPS Delivery
It may not be either postal service at all. It could be US Customs.
re: A question about USPS Delivery
"we all assume it's USPS, but could, in fact, be Canada Post."
"It may not be either postal service at all. It could be US Customs."
re: A question about USPS Delivery
Not questioning anyone or anything here, but you did check the address right? All it would take is "Road" substituted for "Avenue" for it to get to an incorrect, yet existent, place.
re: A question about USPS Delivery
Alyn, one of my books that was sent to a customer in Russia two years ago is still showing as sitting in US Customs in St. Louis. I guess after everyone in US Customs and Homeland Security reads it, they will send it on to Russia. (Maybe they're looking for the secret codes embedded in the text...)