First
it was the gruesome murder of a Jumia Delivery salesman in Port-Harcourt.
Next, a few days ago, the senseless killing of an Uber Driver in Lagos. Both
killings had one thing in common- lazy young men wanted to take advantage of
goods and services being provided by the online retailers without paying for
it. The easiest way for them to do so in their weird calculations was to kill
the men contracted to deliver those services to the end consumer. The question
this poses is- Should pay on delivery be scrapped? Will scrapping it better guarantee
the safety of the delivery men? How can their safety be better guaranteed?
Pay
on delivery is currently an accepted mode of payment in Nigeria due to
various issues like lack of trust of consumers in online retailers and weak
legal protection for consumers. However, until trust is built and consumers
gain adequate confidence in online retailers to ‘deliver’ their own part of
the bargain(no pun intended), scrapping pay on delivery may not be an option.
E-commerce companies will have to vamp security for their delivery men to
discourage and reduce incidents of armed robbery and assault
According to a CNN.com report, being a delivery man is one of the riskiest jobs in America. About 25 percent of delivery men are victims of robberies and assaults. It is therefore very imperative for delivery men and their companies or those they deliver for, take appropriate measures to protect them. First, e-commerce companies and delivery companies if the e-commerce companies are outsourcing, need to set clear rules and procedures for all delivery drivers. Some of the things they could do include-
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Wednesday, 12 April 2017
MURDER OF JUMIA DELIVERY MAN AND UBER DRIVER: HOW CAN WE GUARANTEE THE SAFETY OF DELIVERY MEN?
Labels:
delivery,
ecommerce,
Jumia,
murder,
online retailers,
pay on delivery,
safety,
security,
Uber,
Uber Nigeria
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