guy who does unboxing videos but he only talks about the boxes
āHey, everyone, welcome back. Our first box today is a Uline nine by five by four. Single piece of clear shipping tape over the top, two inch, and the UPS label nicely centered. No edge tape, and you know, thatās fine. This box is pretty light, Iād say under a pound, and taped edges donāt really add much stability here. Letās open it up and see what weāve got for dunnageā¦okay, half-inch bubble wrap, thatās unusual in a box of this size.ā
Sometimes a post throws into perspective just how much niche knowledge you possess.
I read this, and I can tell from the āreviewā that the package was NOT shipped by a professional.
One: two inch tape. Professional establishments use three inch. Itās MUCH easier to seal boxes with, especially around the edges. Two inch is what you can buy from office depot or loweās. Itās fine for moving house, but itās definitely not professional grade.
Two: no edge tape. Just seal your edges, people. UPS basically plays soccer with your packages. Even the light ones, just on principal, give them the structural support you can offer.
Three: centered label. Looks pretty on a package, sure, but it makes it very likely that the label will be covered up when the box is sitting in a stack or a pile, and that increases the chance that it will be manhandled to get to that label or even potentially mis-scanned or missed altogether in a stack. Label the SIDE of the box if at all possible! And put it to the side if you canāt! Visibility!
Also, the reviewer may be accustomed to getting a lot of boxes, but I donāt think they were a professional shipper, either. Someone who has shipped too many boxes would comment on whether the box was new or reused, whether there was any special hazmat (mostly lithium-ion battery) labeling, the condition of the package post shipping, and whether or not the weight of the package matched the stated weight on the label. AND theyād have commented on the two-inch packing tape.
I donāt know what to say other than āyour experiences are not universal,ā because I do shipping and receiving at a machine shop for a living, I see packages sent by professional shippers all the time, and I disagree with you on just about every point.
One: two inch tape. Professional establishments use three inch.
Nope. For packages I see, two inch packing tape is the norm. Today I had one package with three-inch water-activated reinforced paper tape and one (from Uline) with 2.75" packing tape. Everything else used 2" packing tape. Yes, itās exactly the same kind of stuff that you can get at Office Depot or Loweās, and people use it because it gets the job done.
Two: no edge tape.
Not uncommon for small, light packages. I just donāt see box failures on packages under a pound where more tape would have helped. Where I do see failures is overloaded boxes, thirty pounds and up, where the corrugate simply ripped, and no amount of tape would have saved the package.
PSA: please donāt fill an 8x8x6 single-wall box with machine screws and expect it to arrive intact. Fastenal, Iām looking at you.
Three: centered label.
Label on top is standard. I had only one box today with the label on the side, and all the rest on top.
Looks pretty on a package, sure, but it makes it very likely that the label will be covered up when the box is sitting in a stack or a pile, and that increases the chance that it will be manhandled
Your package will get manhandled, regardless of where you put the label. Plan on it.
to get to that label or even potentially mis-scanned or missed altogether in a stack. Label the SIDE of the box if at all possible!
Heck no! I expect labels to be on top and thatās the first place I look for them. If itās on the side, thatās potentially four other places I have to look, which is a pain in the ass when Iām busy. And Iām always busy.
UPS, incidentally, says you should put the label on the largest surface. For the packages I get, thatās usually the top.
Someone who has shipped too many boxes would comment on whether the box was new or reused,
Okay, thatās legit. I do see a fair number of reused boxes.
whether there was any special hazmat (mostly lithium-ion battery) labeling
Hazmats arenāt common enough to mention it every time when there isnāt one present. (My hazmats are usually solvents or paint, and thatās not something I get every day.)
the condition of the package post shipping
Not usually noteworthy. My internal monolog (which is what the above fanciful review is based on) doesnāt bother to mention it unless something unusual happened to the box.
whether or not the weight of the package matched the stated weight on the label
Although I ship just as many packages as I receive, if not more, it never would have occurred to me to check. And I donāt have a scale in the receiving department, so it would be guesswork anyway.
AND theyād have commented on the two-inch packing tape.
Which everyone uses. Thereās not much need to comment when itās far and away the most common type of tape.
Perhaps things have been different for you, but this is how it is in the manufacturing industry.