27-04-2020 1:35 PM
I am thoroughly fed up with sellers listing items as Royal Mail then sending via Hermes without telling the buyer.
Hermes are an absolute nightmare here and I always avoid them - then I find from tracking information an item I thought was being sent Royal Mail is in fact Hermes. It's happened to me twice in the past couple of weeks.
This is not good enough. If a seller wants to change the courier, he should at least have the decency to let a buyer know.
I think it is downright dishonest and changes the terms of the transaction; it's time ebay clamped down on this.
I am coming to the conclusion sellers know that many buyers dislike Hermes - so they list as Royal Mail to get the purchase, then without notifying the purchaser, send Hermes.
So what can buyers do? Nothing as far as I can see except make their feelings plain in feedback - does it warrant a negative? I'm torn on that one. Because of the anxiety any Hermes delivery causes, I feel I want to leave negative, but somehow it doesn't seem quite right.
Any ideas anyone??
Under normal circumstances, I would agree with you - sellers should ship via the delivery service listed, ie. as contracted. However, many sellers are unable to get to the Post Office, or their Post Office is having to operate at greatly reduced hours and with less staff (and may be closed altogether). So it's quite possible that many are having to switch to Hermes, who also offer a very useful collection service if necessary. So something to bear in mind before you rush to leave negative or neutral feedback. These are difficult times for everyone.
I'm sorry to hear that you have problems with Hermes, but you're in a very small minority, so sellers affected as above are unlikely to even think to contact all their buyers, let alone have the time. In all the many years I've been using Hermes, as a buyer and as a seller (I'm a business seller on another account), I've never had a single problem with them. So I suggest you lodge a written complaint to Hermes Head Office so that they can investigate your local courier/s. The last thing a company needs, at any time, is rogue couriers, so they take complaints very seriously indeed.