Not so fast Amazon! Earlier this week, the ecommerce giant claimed it is planning to unleash a swarm of flying package delivery drones at some point in the future.
While some may still consider the idea silly and impractical, one of Amazonâs biggest delivery partners apparently does not.
The buzz on the Web suggests UPS, which handles much of Amazonâs current delivery along with FedEx, has also been testing flying drones.
A spokesman for UPS told The Verge recently:
âThe commercial use of drones is an interesting technology and weâll continue to evaluate it. UPS invests more in technology than any other company in the delivery business, and weâre always planning for the future.â
The UPS vision for flying drones in the package delivery process seems quite different, however. One expert suggests the company is much more likely to use these vehicles to make deliveries from airport to distribution hubs, media sources report.
Earlier this week, Chris Ciaccia of The Street, speculated UPS and FedEx would not sit still and watch a major customer cut them out.
FedEx has apparently also looked at unmanned aerial delivery.
Some Still Think Itâs Crazy
Still others maintain the idea is simply impractical and wonât save money or improve efficiency at all.
Marcus Wohlsen of Wired insists drone delivery doesnât make sense for Amazon because:
- Amazon distribution centers are too far from major population areas to make 30 minute delivery feasible.
- Moving these million square foot distribution centers closer to urban areas where land is more expensive would be incredibly costly offsetting the supposed savings of drone delivery.
- It would take something like 120 drone flights to deliver the number of packages carried in a single UPS delivery truck.
- Problems with messed up orders and possible liability seem pretty insurmountable at the moment.
Instead, Wohlsen insists Amazonâs announcement had more to do with an effort to dominate the news cycle. The announcement broke in time for Cyber Monday, one of the most important shopping days of the year.
And others in the Small Business Trends community have suggested additional ulterior motives.
Lower Costs Are Good For Business
Whatever the outcome, small businesses are probably better off with shippers like UPS and FedEx also looking at cutting costs.
Lower costs and higher efficiency for these companies means small businesses that need to ship to customers wonât be left out in the cold.
Octocopter Drone Photo via Shutterstock