Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Post Gives Online Shoppers More Options For Shipping Their Order

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 May, 2015 11:50 AM
    Canada Post is launching a new feature that gives online shoppers greater control over their parcels.
     
    The postal service said Wednesday that FlexDelivery will allow customers to decide exactly which post office receives the delivery of their online order.
     
    That means a pair of shoes once mailed to your home while you were still at work can now be routed to an outlet near your office or elsewhere.
     
    Canada Post said consumers will need to register for a unique identification code on their website before selecting which post offices they want to go to pick up their items.
     
    Users will then receive a unique FlexDelivery address which substitutes for their traditional mailing address.
     
    When the online order arrives at the post office of choice, the user will receive an email notification.
     
    FlexDelivery is launching as Canada Post looks for ways to stay competitive with retailers who are launching an array of new shopping choices, such as parcel lockers inside their stores.
     
    The new option could also help the postal service contain its costs. About a third of households have nobody home when Canada Post tries to deliver a parcel, which results in the package being further routed to the nearest post office, it said.
     
    Canada Post says about 6,000 post offices across the country will participate in the FlexDelivery option.
     
    On Wednesday, Best Buy announced a new online marketplace that allows small retailers to list their products on the electronics retailer's website. Shoppers will then be able to pick up their merchandise at one of the company's 192 Canadian stores.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No defence witnesses or evidence being called in Via terror plot trial

    No defence witnesses or evidence being called in Via terror plot trial
    TORONTO — Two men accused of plotting to derail a passenger train travelling between Canada and the U.S. chose not to call any evidence or witnesses in their defence at their trial, clearing the way for the case to wrap up in the coming days

    No defence witnesses or evidence being called in Via terror plot trial

    Lawyer for Canadian journalist on trial in Egypt lashes out at Harper govt

    Lawyer for Canadian journalist on trial in Egypt lashes out at Harper govt
    The high-profile human rights lawyer for a Canadian journalist on trial in Egypt is lashing out at what she calls Canada's "woefully inadequate" efforts to bring him home.

    Lawyer for Canadian journalist on trial in Egypt lashes out at Harper govt

    Six Quebecers left country in January and may have joined jihad groups: report

    Six Quebecers left country in January and may have joined jihad groups: report
    MONTREAL — Reports claiming six young Quebecers left the country in mid-January and may have joined jihadist groups in the Middle East prompted a call from public safety officials urging families to contact authorities if they suspect relatives have been radicalized.

    Six Quebecers left country in January and may have joined jihad groups: report

    Police say two bodies found in debris of Quebec fire where children reported missing

    Police say two bodies found in debris of Quebec fire where children reported missing
    GRACEFIELD, Que. — Quebec provincial police say they've found two bodies at the scene of a house fire in the western Quebec community of Gracefield where two children were believed missing late Thursday.

    Police say two bodies found in debris of Quebec fire where children reported missing

    Woman who gave illegal silicone butt injections 'remorseful,' lawyer says

    Woman who gave illegal silicone butt injections 'remorseful,' lawyer says
    TORONTO — The lawyer for a woman from Newmarket, Ont., who used syringes attached to a caulking gun to inject silicone into women's buttocks says she should be sentenced to time served.

    Woman who gave illegal silicone butt injections 'remorseful,' lawyer says

    Politicians, First Nations leaders meet on missing and murdered aboriginal women

    Politicians, First Nations leaders meet on missing and murdered aboriginal women
    OTTAWA — Pressure is mounting on the federal government to take action on missing and murdered aboriginal women, with several premiers and aboriginal leaders meeting in Ottawa today to try to determine what can be done.

    Politicians, First Nations leaders meet on missing and murdered aboriginal women