enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Return merchandise authorization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Return_merchandise...

    A return is costly for the vendor and inconvenient for the customer; any return that can be prevented benefits both parties. Returned merchandise requires management by the manufacturer after the return. The product has a second life cycle after the return. An important aspect of RMA management is learning from RMA trends to prevent further ...

  3. Click-N-Ship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Click-N-Ship

    Click-N-Ship is a service offered by the United States Postal Service that allows customers to create pre-paid Priority Mail shipping labels on ordinary printer paper. [ 1 ] [ a ] The labels include delivery confirmation numbers to track date and time of delivery or attempted delivery. [ 2 ]

  4. Return address - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Return_address

    This prompted the postmaster to inform the public that mail without a return address would be less of a priority than mail with a return address. Still, the public did not widely use a return address until the 1960s when companies began to offer deals for preprinted return labels such as 2,500 labels for $2.00.

  5. Product return - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Product_return

    In the United States, various abuses using the return process allegedly cost retailers more than $9 billion annually. [9] One common practice is the use of the system in order to "borrow" the merchandise at no charge. The customer who engages in this practice purchases the item for temporary use, then returns it when finished.

  6. Label 228 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Label_228

    Label 228 is available free of charge at all USPS Post Office locations or delivered by mail when ordered online. [1] Due to the widespread availability of Label 228, and the relatively large areas of blank space within the design, it has been widely used in sticker art and graffiti more commonly known as "slaps". Unlike many other stickers and ...

  7. Facing Identification Mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facing_Identification_Mark

    The FIM is intended for use primarily on preprinted envelopes and postcards and is applied by the company printing the envelopes or postcards, not by the USPS. The FIM is a nine-bit code consisting of ones (vertical bars) and zeroes (blank spaces). The following five codes are in use: FIM A: || | || (110010011) FIM B: | || || | (101101101)

  8. Intelligent Mail barcode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligent_Mail_barcode

    A possible Intelligent Mail Barcode for the Wikimedia Foundation address. The Intelligent Mail Barcode (IMb) is a 65-bar barcode for use on mail in the United States. [1] The term "Intelligent Mail" refers to services offered by the United States Postal Service for domestic mail delivery.

  9. Nixie (postal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nixie_(Postal)

    Nixie label attached to an envelope. A Nixie is a name given by the United States Postal Service to a piece of mail which is undeliverable as addressed. It is derived from "nix", English slang for the German nichts ("nothing"), and "-ie", an item or a thing. ("Nix" used in English c. 1780–1790, "Nixie" c. 1880–1885.)