Close X
Monday, November 18, 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

    21-Year-Old Langford Man In Critical Condition After Being Stabbed In Leg: Police

    21-Year-Old Langford Man In Critical Condition After Being Stabbed In Leg: Police
    RCMP in the southern Vancouver Island city say paramedics responded to the incident at about 5:15 p.m. Wednesday.

    21-Year-Old Langford Man In Critical Condition After Being Stabbed In Leg: Police

    Homicide-Suicide Behind Death Of B.C. Teens In Lake: RCMP Investigators

    Homicide-Suicide Behind Death Of B.C. Teens In Lake: RCMP Investigators
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Mounties are ruling the deaths of two teens in a central B.C. lake last May the result of a homicide-suicide.

    Homicide-Suicide Behind Death Of B.C. Teens In Lake: RCMP Investigators

    Ottawa Still Plans To Balance Budget, Fulfil Commitments, Despite Cheap Oil

    Ottawa Still Plans To Balance Budget, Fulfil Commitments, Despite Cheap Oil
    VANCOVUER, B.C. — Federal Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the government still plans to balance the budget and keep its commitments despite the collapse of oil prices.

    Ottawa Still Plans To Balance Budget, Fulfil Commitments, Despite Cheap Oil

    B.C. Upholds Certificates For Controversial Prosperity, Tulsequah Mines

    B.C. Upholds Certificates For Controversial Prosperity, Tulsequah Mines
    The New Prosperity mine has been granted a five-year extension of its certificate, while the Tulsequah Chief Mine has been determined to have "substantially started," allowing the certificate to remain in effect for the life of the project.

    B.C. Upholds Certificates For Controversial Prosperity, Tulsequah Mines

    No decision on retrial for Calgary reservist convicted in training accident

    No decision on retrial for Calgary reservist convicted in training accident
    CALGARY — There's still no decision on whether a Calgary reservist who won an appeal of his conviction in a deadly Afghanistan training accident will face a new trial.

    No decision on retrial for Calgary reservist convicted in training accident

    Woe Canada: Prentice says Alberta oil crunch will hurt economies across country

    Woe Canada: Prentice says Alberta oil crunch will hurt economies across country
    EDMONTON — The aftershocks of Alberta's collapsing petro-economy will shake up homes and businesses from coast to coast to coast, Premier Jim Prentice said Wednesday.

    Woe Canada: Prentice says Alberta oil crunch will hurt economies across country