u/Krawger247

▲ 9 r/UPSers

So I've been working for UPS for half a year now, and I've been told/trained to follow the sequence for preload(1000-1999, 2000-2999, etc), but they keep moving me around the hub when people call in, so I have new trucks/drivers almost weekly.

But I've noticed that frequently that some drivers will reorganize the shelfs/disrupt the original sequence, because they know the routes/have a preferred "sequence" themselves.

I havent been talked to by any of the drivers/supervisors that I am doing a poor job, so I dont think I'm loading the trucks poorly.

So is the original sequence really that important, or is it more of a guideline? I feel like if they stopped moving me around to cover other people, I could get to learn a drivers preferred sequence, and then they wouldnt have to reorganize anything.

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u/Krawger247 — 12 days ago