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Man Finds Random Packages On His Doorstep And Refuses To Return Them On His Own Dime
Man holding phone and package, frustrated with company sending packages to wrong address expecting return on his dime
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Man Finds Random Packages On His Doorstep And Refuses To Return Them On His Own Dime

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Everyone makes mistakes, and it’s the mark of a more reasonable person that they will actually try to fix them as soon as possible, unless they are the sort to “grace” the various stories of entitlement across the internet. This is, or at least should be, doubly true in business, as there tends to be real liability, but sometimes even a company can be unhelpful.

A man asked the internet if he was wrong for refusing to personally bring back a parcel a company had accidentally sent to his address. When he contacted them, they were initially pretty unwilling to fix their own mistake. We reached out to the man who made the post via private message and will update the article when he gets back to us.

RELATED:

    An unexpected parcel with a strangers name on it is generally a mistake

    Image credits: voronaman111 / envatoelements (not the actual photo)

    So one man was surprised when the company asked him to hand-deliver the parcel they misplaced

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    Image credits: nblxer /envatoelements (not the actual photo)

    Image credits: Noe_Wunn

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    Since it doesn’t bring in money directly, some companies don’t care about customer support

    Image credits: DC Studio / freepik (not the actual photo)

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    Many businesses treat customer support like that dusty treadmill in the corner of the gym, something they know they should invest in but would rather pretend doesn’t exist. A delivery company is sending out vehicles all the time, would it really cost them that much extra to just pick up the item? The logic seems foolproof at first glance: support teams don’t close deals, they cost money to train and staff, and hey, wouldn’t it be great if we just replaced them all with a chatbot named Chad? The spreadsheet says yes, the CFO nods approvingly, and suddenly your customer service department has the budget of a lemonade stand. But penny-pinching on customer support is like trying to save money by skipping oil changes on your car. Sure, you’re pocketing a few bucks now, but you’re also slowly removing repeat customers one by one.

    Companies convince themselves that customers won’t really need much help anyway. They’ll just check the FAQ page, right? They’ll happily navigate through seventeen layers of automated phone menus while listening to hold music that sounds like a dental drill remixed by someone who hates joy. Except customers absolutely will not do this cheerfully. They’ll do it while composing mental drafts of the scathing reviews they’re about to post everywhere from Google to their family group chat. The math that makes bad customer service look attractive is missing some crucial variables. Sure, you saved forty thousand dollars by cutting your support team in half. Congratulations! You also just gave your loyal customers a reason to take their business to your competitor, and acquiring new customers to replace them costs somewhere between five and twenty-five times more than keeping the ones you had. It’s like celebrating the money you saved by canceling your home insurance the same week your house catches fire.

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    And let’s talk about the domino effect of terrible support. When someone has a nightmare experience trying to get help, they don’t just quietly move on with their lives. They become evangelists for your competitors. They write novels in the review section or perhaps, like this man, on Reddit. They tell everyone at dinner parties about the time they spent three hours on hold only to be disconnected. In the age of social media, one spectacularly bad support interaction can reach thousands of people before you’ve finished your morning coffee.

    It’s not just customers who end up feeling annoyed, the company also suffers

    Image credits: Drazen Zigic / freepik (not the actual photo)

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    What many executives miss is that customer support teams are basically treasure troves of business intelligence disguised as cost centers. These are the people who hear about problems before they explode, who understand what customers actually want versus what your product team thinks they want, and who can spot emerging trends faster than any analytics dashboard. But when you staff your support department with three overwhelmed people and a prayer, you lose all of that insight. You’re flying blind while congratulating yourself on fuel savings. The sad irony is that skimping on support creates a negative feedback loop. Undertrained, overworked staff can’t solve problems effectively. Customers get frustrated and contact support multiple times about the same issue. Wait times balloon. Good employees flee for jobs where they’re not treated like punching bags. New hires arrive, receive minimal training, and the cycle continues. You’re spending money constantly fighting fires instead of preventing them.

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    Meanwhile, companies that actually invest in stellar customer support are eating everyone else’s lunch. Zappos didn’t become legendary because their shoes are made of unicorn leather. Chewy didn’t build a cult following because their dog food has magical properties. They won because when you contact them, you talk to an actual human who can actually help and actually seems to care. Revolutionary stuff, apparently. The beautiful secret is that good customer support actually saves money in the long run. Empowered support teams fix root problems instead of applying band-aids. Satisfied customers don’t keep calling back. Well-trained agents resolve issues efficiently instead of bouncing people around like ping-pong balls. It’s almost like treating people well has positive consequences.

    In today’s world where customers can switch to your competitor faster than you can say “please rate your support experience,” treating customer service like an optional expense is taking an unnecessary risk with your business. The companies winning aren’t necessarily those with the fanciest products, they’re the ones who figured out that investing in customer support isn’t just warm and fuzzy niceness. It’s cold, hard business sense wrapped in a smile and a genuine desire to help. Your customers will remember how you made them feel long after they’ve forgotten your product’s technical specifications, and that memory will either build your empire or fund someone else’s.

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    Most thought he was being reasonable

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    Some did warn him to be careful

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    [others were suspicious it might be a scam]

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    Others shared similar stories

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    A few even suggested he just keep it

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    THINKS OP SHOULD HAVE BROUGH IT:

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    One user even had a theory to what might have happened

    Poll Question

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    Justin Sandberg

    Justin Sandberg

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    I am a writer at Bored Panda. Despite being born in the US, I ended up spending most of my life in Europe, from Latvia, Austria, and Georgia to finally settling in Lithuania. At Bored Panda, you’ll find me covering topics ranging from the cat meme of the day to red flags in the workplace and really anything else. In my free time, I enjoy hiking, beating other people at board games, cooking, good books, and bad films.

    Read less »
    Justin Sandberg

    Justin Sandberg

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    I am a writer at Bored Panda. Despite being born in the US, I ended up spending most of my life in Europe, from Latvia, Austria, and Georgia to finally settling in Lithuania. At Bored Panda, you’ll find me covering topics ranging from the cat meme of the day to red flags in the workplace and really anything else. In my free time, I enjoy hiking, beating other people at board games, cooking, good books, and bad films.

    Viktorija Ošikaitė

    Viktorija Ošikaitė

    Author, Community member

    Read more »

    I'm a senior visual editor here at Bored Panda and I enjoy a good laugh. My work ranges from serious topics related to toxic work environments and relationship difficulties to humorous articles about online shopping fails and introvert memes. When I'm not at my work desk, checking if every single pixel is in the right place, I usually spend my free time playing board games, taking pictures, and watching documentaries

    Read less »

    Viktorija Ošikaitė

    Viktorija Ošikaitė

    Author, Community member

    I'm a senior visual editor here at Bored Panda and I enjoy a good laugh. My work ranges from serious topics related to toxic work environments and relationship difficulties to humorous articles about online shopping fails and introvert memes. When I'm not at my work desk, checking if every single pixel is in the right place, I usually spend my free time playing board games, taking pictures, and watching documentaries

    Rugilė Žemaitytė

    Rugilė Žemaitytė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    As a Visual Editor at Bored Panda, my favorite part of the job involves browsing the web for the cutest cat pics, the funniest memes and eye-catching illustrations to brighten up your day!

    Read less »

    Rugilė Žemaitytė

    Rugilė Žemaitytė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    As a Visual Editor at Bored Panda, my favorite part of the job involves browsing the web for the cutest cat pics, the funniest memes and eye-catching illustrations to brighten up your day!

    What do you think ?
    Jaya
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    People who automatically think it's a d**g trafficking thing, sound a bit overdramatic. Sure, it could be, but it's just as likely that someone simply made a typo when typing in the house number (20 when it should have been 200 for instance). Or someone sent packages as a gift to someone and has the wrong street name or wrong house number. We don't live in an action movie, most things don't have something very dramatic and spectacular reason behind them.

    Leah Woodard
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My MAGAt family and neighbors would think you were a real bore.

    Load More Replies...
    Zig Zag Wanderer
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I live in a very rural area. So far I have had a phone dropped in my driveway, and an air fryer delivered to the wrong address. Tried to deliver the phone to correct addressee, but they stopped responding. Mine. Air fryer seemed like a nice gift. Held it for a few weeks, then mine. Stuff em!

    Rick Murray
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I live very rural, and I work daytime hours. If anything came from Amazon (obvious box), I'd get in touch with them. If the address was nearby I'd take it over (somebody has already done this for me) otherwise they can arrange a pick-up (I'll leave it at my local supermarket as it's right by work, anything else is a firm no). If it isn't Amazon, I'll contact the delivery company and tell them their parcel is in the barn, they have seven days to collect it before I'm turning it over to the Gendarmes. So far it's only been Amazon parcels and the odd letter that's been misdelivered. The strangest one was my vitamin pills (cheaper on Amazon than the local chemist) which went to a house with an entirely different name (not even a homophone) in the same village. The most annoying one is Chronopost that don't bother to come out rural and will leave the parcel in a local pick-up point and say "customer not home". I have complained to Amazon repeatedly, so I think they use them less for me now.

    Load More Replies...
    A Strike
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I’ve got a good one that happened to me. I order tropical fish from the website liveaquaria and one day, completely out of the blue, I received two HUGE boxes to my doorstep. I hadn’t ordered anything and was very confused when I opened the boxes to find they contained over two hundred pounds of live saltwater rock. This is rock that has gone through the nitrogen cycle and is ready to be put in a tank to become part of the ecosystem. It takes months to cycle rock and they have bacteria and algal growth in them. They have to be kept wet so they survive and don’t start to rot. I contacted the company and said it had been delivered to me by mistake and asked them what I should do about it. They sent me shipping labels and told me to ship the boxes back to them. I loaded hundreds of pounds of rock and carried it into ups and sent them back. I didn’t even get so much as a “thank you” from liveaquaria for the trouble. :/

    Mike F
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'll bet that next time you'll put that 💩 on Craigslist!

    Load More Replies...
    Load More Comments
    Jaya
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    People who automatically think it's a d**g trafficking thing, sound a bit overdramatic. Sure, it could be, but it's just as likely that someone simply made a typo when typing in the house number (20 when it should have been 200 for instance). Or someone sent packages as a gift to someone and has the wrong street name or wrong house number. We don't live in an action movie, most things don't have something very dramatic and spectacular reason behind them.

    Leah Woodard
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My MAGAt family and neighbors would think you were a real bore.

    Load More Replies...
    Zig Zag Wanderer
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I live in a very rural area. So far I have had a phone dropped in my driveway, and an air fryer delivered to the wrong address. Tried to deliver the phone to correct addressee, but they stopped responding. Mine. Air fryer seemed like a nice gift. Held it for a few weeks, then mine. Stuff em!

    Rick Murray
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I live very rural, and I work daytime hours. If anything came from Amazon (obvious box), I'd get in touch with them. If the address was nearby I'd take it over (somebody has already done this for me) otherwise they can arrange a pick-up (I'll leave it at my local supermarket as it's right by work, anything else is a firm no). If it isn't Amazon, I'll contact the delivery company and tell them their parcel is in the barn, they have seven days to collect it before I'm turning it over to the Gendarmes. So far it's only been Amazon parcels and the odd letter that's been misdelivered. The strangest one was my vitamin pills (cheaper on Amazon than the local chemist) which went to a house with an entirely different name (not even a homophone) in the same village. The most annoying one is Chronopost that don't bother to come out rural and will leave the parcel in a local pick-up point and say "customer not home". I have complained to Amazon repeatedly, so I think they use them less for me now.

    Load More Replies...
    A Strike
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I’ve got a good one that happened to me. I order tropical fish from the website liveaquaria and one day, completely out of the blue, I received two HUGE boxes to my doorstep. I hadn’t ordered anything and was very confused when I opened the boxes to find they contained over two hundred pounds of live saltwater rock. This is rock that has gone through the nitrogen cycle and is ready to be put in a tank to become part of the ecosystem. It takes months to cycle rock and they have bacteria and algal growth in them. They have to be kept wet so they survive and don’t start to rot. I contacted the company and said it had been delivered to me by mistake and asked them what I should do about it. They sent me shipping labels and told me to ship the boxes back to them. I loaded hundreds of pounds of rock and carried it into ups and sent them back. I didn’t even get so much as a “thank you” from liveaquaria for the trouble. :/

    Mike F
    Community Member
    3 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'll bet that next time you'll put that 💩 on Craigslist!

    Load More Replies...
    Load More Comments
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