Jump to content

Package forwarding: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 3: Line 3:
==History==
==History==
The earliest known systemized package forwarding service was started by Toshiyasu Abe, a Japanese-American citizen living in Seattle. In 1990, with no other business offering this kind of forwarding service, Abe noted that people in countries outside of the US shopped from US catalog stores by sending order forms in the mail from mail order catalogs, or by phone if they spoke English. Since many catalog stores didn’t ship to Japan, Abe founded his company, OPAS, using his fax machine and a stack of catalogs, to build a bridge between Japanese buyers and US catalog stores. OPAS placed the orders in the US for their Japanese customers, and after receiving their packages to its US address, OPAS forwarded customer's purchases to them in Japan.
The earliest known systemized package forwarding service was started by Toshiyasu Abe, a Japanese-American citizen living in Seattle. In 1990, with no other business offering this kind of forwarding service, Abe noted that people in countries outside of the US shopped from US catalog stores by sending order forms in the mail from mail order catalogs, or by phone if they spoke English. Since many catalog stores didn’t ship to Japan, Abe founded his company, OPAS, using his fax machine and a stack of catalogs, to build a bridge between Japanese buyers and US catalog stores. OPAS placed the orders in the US for their Japanese customers, and after receiving their packages to its US address, OPAS forwarded customer's purchases to them in Japan.

As the age of the internet began, computers became more and more popular, and the way of shopping transitioned from catalog shopping to online shopping, with limitless options for international buyers.
As the age of the internet began, computers became more and more popular, and the way of shopping transitioned from catalog shopping to online shopping, with limitless options for international buyers.

In addition to providing an address within the (shopping) country, many package forwarding companies now offer storage options, consolidation, multiple shipping options, mail forwarding, and more.
In addition to providing an address within the (shopping) country, many package forwarding companies now offer storage options, consolidation, multiple shipping options, mail forwarding, and more.



Revision as of 20:25, 5 May 2020

Package forwarding is an international shipping service offered by shipping companies to international online shoppers who want to do cross-border online shopping. Package forwarding is becoming more and more popular among international shoppers because of the high growth rate of e-commerce websites and shipping limitations of most such websites.[1] Package forwarding service is provided by package forwarders to make cross-border shopping convenient and easy, getting rid of the problems in payment and shipping. A package forwarding service is different from mail forwarding. Mail forwarding refers to the mail in traditional meaning, or magazines or papers that are normally called mail, while package forwarding refers to online purchases or orders that are shipped within a bag or a box.

History

The earliest known systemized package forwarding service was started by Toshiyasu Abe, a Japanese-American citizen living in Seattle. In 1990, with no other business offering this kind of forwarding service, Abe noted that people in countries outside of the US shopped from US catalog stores by sending order forms in the mail from mail order catalogs, or by phone if they spoke English. Since many catalog stores didn’t ship to Japan, Abe founded his company, OPAS, using his fax machine and a stack of catalogs, to build a bridge between Japanese buyers and US catalog stores. OPAS placed the orders in the US for their Japanese customers, and after receiving their packages to its US address, OPAS forwarded customer's purchases to them in Japan.

As the age of the internet began, computers became more and more popular, and the way of shopping transitioned from catalog shopping to online shopping, with limitless options for international buyers.

In addition to providing an address within the (shopping) country, many package forwarding companies now offer storage options, consolidation, multiple shipping options, mail forwarding, and more.

Reasons

There are several reasons that caused package forwarding service into existence:

  1. Fast development of online e-commerce shopping.
  2. The convenient of international checkout with PayPal and others.
  3. The needs of shoppers in one country that desire to buy from online retailers from another country.
  4. Transit safety and insurance features provided by some providers.
  5. The price differences between domestic stores and international stores.

There are several challenges with cross-border (US retailer) online shopping, and these include shipping and paying for orders. For instance, US online stores are popular worldwide, but some of them only ship to US addresses or their international shipping rates are prohibitive. US package forwarding services help international shoppers with shipping their purchases from the US to their home address or help them place a direct order with the US retailers if they do not have a US billing address. It should be noted that since 2010, this (US) model has been emulated internationally and currently there are many countries offering a very similar service to overseas buyers.

Procedure

A package forwarding service works normally with five steps:

  1. The shopper first gets a native shipping address (which is the same as the package forwarders warehouse) and a member number (account number) from a package forwarder.
  2. The shopper places an online order and for the shipping address, uses the native shipping address and the member number (usually presented like a suite number).
  3. Package forwarders receive the package and register to the shopper and usually provide some sort of storage.
  4. Shoppers pay the package forwarder for various package handling services and an international shipping fee.
  5. The package forwarder ships the package out and the shopper receives the package at home.

See also

References

  1. ^ Reilly, Claire (7 November 2014). "Package forwarding from the US to Australia: A complete guide". CNET. Retrieved 13 January 2015.