They tried that, actually. The problem was that people just cannot grasp the concept of there being other people in the world, so customer service was always getting angry calls from people complaining that they could see the delivery was just up the street and not understanding why the driver kept stopping other places instead of just coming straight to them.
Amazon still does this as well as Doordash and Instacart. The only places that don’t have a map to follow the delivery (that I know of) is Fed-Ex, USPS, and UPS.
They tried that, actually. The problem was that people just cannot grasp the concept of there being other people in the world, so customer service was always getting angry calls from people complaining that they could see the delivery was just up the street and not understanding why the driver kept stopping other places instead of just coming straight to them.
Amazon in the UK still does it.
Amazon still does this as well as Doordash and Instacart. The only places that don’t have a map to follow the delivery (that I know of) is Fed-Ex, USPS, and UPS.
Uber Eats does it, too.
Lots of places do that.
I think he was just making fun of how impatient we are now in this world.