That's good. i am still waiting for 3 that I did last week. I figure it will take a week for them to be approved based on my others. I was more concerned about the box shops since there's much more reimbursement involved.@guysmom wrote:
Well, finally!!! My 3 Micro shops were finally approved today!! YAY!!
No lines anywhere for me, except for one location out of town, that I had shopped maybe 5-10 years ago? 13 minute wait. Same situation as last time. Terrible then. Terrible now. Locations like that are what give the PO their poor reputation.@MisterBill wrote:
I guess it depends on the area. Longest line I've had is 2 people and I'm in NY in an area that just entered phase 2 reopening last week.@sestrahelena wrote:
Long lines/wait times! My area "reopened" in some phase or another this week and lines have been crazy long. The week before had been normal. So reopening might affect everyone's areas, just aheads-up.
@MisterBill wrote:
I've always passed on the first attempt as well. It was very poorly done, or intentionally confusing. Those two women should have been at a table not right next to the line. I thought one of them was on line and had put the box on the table to avoid holding it. And the other one seemed to be holding tape to purchase. And what was the guy doing standing at a station if there is no clerk there?@sandyf wrote:
I finally passed on the third try but previously have always gotten it for years on the first try. I thought the person in line right in front of me could have been waiting. I could not see if she was doing something at the table. It looked like she had just put her envelope down while she waited!!!
Bottom line there was not enough information in the picture to accurately answer the question. We have no idea why the guy was standing at the unattended station. Was he being assisted by the clerk at the other station and had to step away to fill out a form? I've seen that happen. Or was he picking up held mail or a package and the clerk went to the back to get it? Also a possibility. Either way, it's a poor example to use when you're testing whether people understand what number to count when doing a shop.@JustForFun wrote:
The judgement calls are near impossible in 2D. We all end up guessing or asking the scheduler what we did wrong. That's probably a test of something but has no relationship to the number of waiting customers. They should skip the question, or allow it be thoughtfully answered based a real life video.
Yes, that IS nice when they apologize. Have you ever had the postal clerk not even bother asking you the Hazmat question and just inputting it themselves on their own screen? That's happened to me twice over the years, the most recent being just 2 weeks ago. I wonder what happens to them when they're "busted" over that.@sandyf wrote:
But I had my first clerk that ever apologized for a wait. That was refreshing.
That sucks.@sandyf wrote:
Two post offices today...and then home to spend over 2 hours doing the report. Got all the photos sent to my email and then my email was offline for about 2 hours so i could not recover them! The msc website was very slow and kept timing out for uploading and then just disappeared so I lost all the work I had input until that part. Both po's had lines of 12-15 minutes. What a struggle. Finally both my email and the msc website seemed to recover at the same time and the last input of the second po was a breeze. Ugh. I think I averaged about $4 an hour on that job. But I had my first clerk that ever apologized for a wait. That was refreshing.
But how often do they acknowledge you while you're waiting, which is one of the questions? I've never had them do that.@SoCalMama wrote:
That sucks.
75% of the time, the clerk says to me, “Sorry about the wait (or) thanks for waiting.”
@MisterBill wrote:
But how often do they acknowledge you while you're waiting, which is one of the questions? I've never had them do that.@SoCalMama wrote:
That sucks.
75% of the time, the clerk says to me, “Sorry about the wait (or) thanks for waiting.”
I've never seen a lobby assistant, either.@SoCalMama wrote:
50% of the time if there's a Lobby Assistant, they will apologize for the wait. It depends on the neighborhood and demographic. They're probably trying to avoid getting a bad survey from the receipt from an impatient person.
So Cal, there are plenty. The higher the house prices, the better service you'll get in most cases. Exception : Del Mar, CA where the houses are over $2 million, and the clerk was a wench.@MisterBill wrote:
I've never seen a lobby assistant, either.@SoCalMama wrote:
50% of the time if there's a Lobby Assistant, they will apologize for the wait. It depends on the neighborhood and demographic. They're probably trying to avoid getting a bad survey from the receipt from an impatient person.
Do they have valet parking at the post office?@SoCalMama wrote:
So Cal, there are plenty. The higher the house prices, the better service you'll get in most cases. Exception : Del Mar, CA where the houses are over $2 million, and the clerk was a wench.
It doesn't say that there is a limit in the guidelines for the micro shops. Just the 30 minute wait. Maybe they forgot it, maybe it's intentional. I'd ask before trying it.@Insight wrote:
I think it is five per day and there is a 30-minute wait between each shop
@SoCalMama wrote:
So Cal, there are plenty. The higher the house prices, the better service you'll get in most cases. Exception : Del Mar, CA where the houses are over $2 million, and the clerk was a wench.@MisterBill wrote:
I've never seen a lobby assistant, either.@SoCalMama wrote:
50% of the time if there's a Lobby Assistant, they will apologize for the wait. It depends on the neighborhood and demographic. They're probably trying to avoid getting a bad survey from the receipt from an impatient person.
@callinectes wrote:
I don't see any info on the max number of micro-shops one can do in a day or week. Do any of you know? I can put together a great rural route depending on how many one can do.
It doesn't have to be the only thing in the box, does it?@pambam wrote:
Now to work out how to explain I have a thermometer that weighs a pound.
Bad idea. Read the guidelines.@LindaS wrote:
pambam, could it be an infrared thermometer? They are handheld and I found one on Amazon that weighs 8.8 ounces and measures 7.6 x 4.4 x 2.1 inches. You could have 2 in your package to make your weight. Obviously you're not mailing actual infrared thermometers, you just have this info in the back of your mind when you answer the question about what's in the package.
@pambam wrote:
Did 25 of these over the last two weeks and though at first I hated the app, I'm now a fan - even if I have to turn my phone on and off in order to get the report to submit. Because there's always a table far away from the retail area, almost always near the boxes, I photograph my receipt and finish my report before I've even left the post office. Now if they would only reduce the amount of time between shops to 15 minutes!