Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Delivery giant plans to hire more couriers

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EVRI is planning to hire 9,000 more staff as it prepares to deliver more parcels after agreeing to be bought by new owners in a £2.7 billion deal.

The company said it was embarking on a recruitmen­t drive to grow its team of couriers and in its warehouses.

Scotland, Bury St Edmunds, Plymouth and Gatwick have been selected as key areas for hiring in a bid to meet swelling demand.

Evri said the number of parcels being delivered was now higher than during the pandemic years, when lockdowns and the shift to remote working caused home deliveries to boom.

This has been sparked by online shopping at high street retailers as well as fast-growing new businesses and secondhand platforms.

Evri, formerly known as Hermes, will see its workforce of selfemploy­ed couriers grow to 28,000 after the hiring spree as it prepares to deliver up to four million parcels on busy days.

The company last week revealed it had agreed to be bought by Apollo Global Management.

It means it will move from current owners Advent Internatio­nal, a different private equity firm which bought the business prior to its rebrand.

In past years, Evri was hit by complaints of slow and missing deliveries, with an MP last year questionin­g whether it should be investigat­ed over “poor customer service”.

It has more recently invested millions of pounds in customer service improvemen­ts and says 99% of its deliveries are made on time.

Martijn De Lange, Evri chief executive, said: “New client wins and increased parcel volumes are proof of the trust customers have in our service and our biggest-ever recruitmen­t drive promises to deliver another record year.”

It expects to hire 8,000 couriers alongside 1,000 warehouse and other supporting roles this year.

Couriers typically earn around £16.50 per hour, according to Evri.

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